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NGOs often undertake various community based awareness, peer education activities and home visits as part of ongoing care and support effort for people living with HIV.
I wondered if home visits worked. I had no experience of doing home visits for community engagement and mobilization. The thought of turning up at someone's front door unannounced or for the matter someone even at my door did not go well with me. There were other things to fuel my anxiety like the uncertainty of what you're going to find on the other side of the door.
I got an insight into home visits when I was part of the Glocon Team with Ian and Alison in India (Mizoram and West Bengal) in February this year. The plan was that we would divide into 3-4 teams and go to different homes. After the visit, the team congregated at a common place in the village, sometimes joined by local community members, we would reflect on our home visits.
A key lesson was that you don’t just drop in someone’s home. Home visit is done by invitation and time suitable to the family members. I found that we were usually welcomed by the family and even offered drinks and refreshments. Also we always had a person known to the family in our team. Alison Campbell underlines the most important factor “I think the key is in the way home visits are done. SALT approach is key. Lots of home visits are done in a different attitude, more provider or teacher than alongside.”
Local Salvation Army team, CHAN in Mizoram has set a fine example of home visits. CHAN has fostered positive relationships with local community members through home visits. Realizing that the community is too huge to be covered by the Salvation Army team, it has encouraged formation of volunteer youth groups within the community which do regular home visits. Over last six years, local neighborhoodsin Dinthar have determined their own response to HIV through home visits, community-led change and youth response.
“ Willingness to meet is developed by the home visits, because people share more openly and privately at home. The concerns are gradually shared, until the community is ready to meet together.” – Alison . What happens in home settings is through community conversation a personal connection is build with the family. This is community counseling in nature where community members reflect on theirsituations and see the issue in their own context. Home visits also act as stimulation for the visiting SALT team and growth of dignity for those visited. ''Accompaniment in the home and neighborhood environment a source of self confidence development” observes Onesmus, an experienced facilitator from Kenya.
Another critical lesson I learned about home visits was from Nagaland. To focus on selected homes can be stigmatizing. Therefore, selecting a group of homes in the neighbourhood is done. I recall a peer educator working on PPTCT project in Nagaland shared with me . “I used to go for home visits alone under PPTCT programme…people used to shun me away as I visited only homes of potential clients…Now after SALT programme I go with village youth teams and visit homes in the neighbourhood without targeting any particular house. We have moved away from information providers to facilitating conversation about HIV in the family. Referrals to the hospital for HIV testing have shot up. Now women come to me to take them for testing”
In the context of HIV and associated risk factors such as injecting drug use, the experience of personal stigma within local neighborhoods grows. Ian Campbell shares how home visits can lead to acceptance and openness.”The expansion of HIV related community response is noticed through home care with one person and relatives, that 'infects' neighbours with a realisation of shared concern, and the possibility of reaching for a better future” .To illustrate, here is a stoey from village leader in Dinthar, “I myself did a home visit to the home of a positive person who had passed away. I am the one who prepared his body for funeral and by touching his body demonstrated that HIV cannot be transmitted by touching”.
Ian during Glocon Kenya found the communities continue to respond to their issues without external stimulation or support for nearly two decades. Moreover this has been transferred to several other communities. “We see accumulated effect – it is alive, because neighborhood groups take ownership. Ownership is facilitated by home visits, don’t forget. Both home and group/neighborhood processes are needed. The team is still working because it is beyond the boundaries of any one institution. Always think beyond institutions, to the Spirit of God, and the human connection. " comments Ian.
The question is how many NGOs are exposed to the concept of home and neighbourhood life. Experience shows that rather than being limited to delivery of services as response to HIV, organizations can explore learning based in local experience and action. It must also be kept in mind that mindset with which home visit is done can be a determining factor in its success.
Comment
SALT visits to homes stirs up curiosity and enhances mobilization through multiple homes/families opening up to an issue through conversations. When a group of 3-4 SALT team members walk down a neighborhood to the homes.
They are visible.
Walking alone for home visit may go unnoticed and is lonely too. The Neighbourhood families are watching and getting curious. Who are those people? Why are they visiting there? What is happening? May i also join them? Come and visit me too. I have not visited yet am the closest neighbour. I need to visit too. This is an issue affected most of us here.
We need to come to and discuss about. Multiple homes opens up to the issue at hand, they want to discuss, make decisions, act and document their actions and change. *Home visits are randomly done – no target, issues are stimulated and explored, relationships are built and truth telling is an asset.
Hi Frank,
Thanks for sharing your experience. Did you visit selected homes OVCs or the neighbourhood alone?
Rituu
Thank you for this opportunity for Work and Happiness, an NGO based in Ghana West Africa to also share its experience on home visitation as parts of its tool to get to the communities to support the needy and the vulnerable. We work in collaboration with the social welfare department and World Vision Ghana.we are in charge of two deprived communities who also have cases of HIV/AIDS incidence and therefore have rendered a number of the kids there orphans. What we do is that we we go into the community to register children who fall within the category of Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVCs) who are below 18rys. This is how we do it, we visit the basic schools within the community and have a discussion with the heads and eventually the teachers who help us identify needy children who are also orphans, and are in the schools, the results are so clear they call these children out for us to interview them as well as their guardians and the information we gather are so glaring, we register these kids, take their bio data and every information we need to take including going to see their homes. After this selection exercise social welfare move into the communty to cross check the information we have picked from the ground. We then request for a volunteer teacher who will monitor the progress of the kids in the school and as well will form part of the home visitation team, this team is made up two people from the community and one teacher. we organise orientation for for them on how to go about the visitation, the objective is to monitor the health and educational progress of the kids both at home and at school. World Vision Ghana, support the kids with school supplies and and medical care, this is done through the data we pick from the ground. Personally i have been part of the visitation team before and the beauty is that it brings you face to face with challenges that people are facing in their closet, and if you politely show genuine concern to assist them, put yourself in their shoes as we say it here, then they will be willing to share, the experience has always humbled me in every venture i undertake, and apart from that you also monitor and evaluate the extent of progress the support is making in the lives of these kids. As we speak we are organising to gather clothes and again other school materials to go to the support of these kids as follow up and to cheack on thier progress at school as well.
Abednego's experience of home visits in Kenya
Comment by Abednego mutungwa on December 21, 2013 at 6:24pmDelete
on our way to an home visits where we were invited we are living with disability but that does not stop us being present in others life as they realize their own strengths ,the future looks bright
Experiences from friends in India Civil Society: Dr Suresh Sundar, Anand Chaudhuri and Anita Rego
Thanks for this post, Rituu. I find it to be a most critical articulation, and a helpful stimulus to all of us connected to The Constellation. I know that, for me, and for several other coaches, home visits are an integral part of how we image the progression of Community Life Competence - they are precursors to the major tools such as The Dream, The Self-Assessment and Action Planning, and they continue as those tools are worked out in the context of wider community.
We know from our own personal experience that there are private things, intimate things that we hold close to ourselves, and these are often only exposed in the environment of the private home; they are not easily shared publicly. But, a team moving between households in response to invitations can stimulate confidence within the home, and connection between households, so that a link is established between private home and public community life. There is a point in time where the home visits approach a critical pressure, and "pushes" the response forward towards community-level ownership. I've found this is often the best time to introduce The Dream and the other tools.
But, what is our common experience across the CLCP-implementing Constellation? Are home visits an explicit part of our process? Should they be? Are they an essential component, or just a nice-to-have?
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