Abstract:
Purpose: The purpose was to establish the effect of
informed consent in communicating with Person’s Living
with HIV (PLHIV) in Siaya, Kenya.
Methodology: This was both a descriptive research and
inferential design. Data was collected using a field survey
involving two sets of questionnaires for key informant and
PLHIV interviews. Spearman’s rho correlations and
simple linear regression models were used to estimate the
relationship between the independent variable (informed
consent) and the dependent variable (communication), and
ANOVA test was done to test the hypothesis.
Findings: The calculated proportionate sample size was
374. However, the respondents rose to 396 which
represented 96.18% of those who agreed to be
interviewed, with 17 rejections which were removed from
analysis leaving a sample of 376. Normality Test was
conducted to determine the study sample was drawn from
normal population. Under null hypothesis, there was no
difference between the sample and the population from
which the sample was drawn and therefore there was
significant evidence to reject the null hypothesis and
accept
the alternative hypothesis (p-value=0.000
CI=95%). Further, findings show that 82.30% enrolled
onto the Text for Adherence (T4A) mobile app voluntarily
and 70.71% signed the consent form and 6.07% stated that
consent was implied.
Unique Contribution to Theory, Practice and Policy:
The Technology Readiness (TR), Technology Acceptance
Model (TAM) and Diffusion of Innovations (DOI were
used to anchor future studies. This study has concluded
that it was important for individuals enrolling into mhealth
communication interventions to consent and this
responsibility is for system supporters in mhealth space.
The findings further established that enrolment onto
mhealth apps improves health status of patients suffering
from chronic illnesses. This has implications for policy
changes or improvements in mhealth generally in Kenya
and globally. A positive intervention such as Text for
Adherence (T4A) should prompt the government to scale
up enrolment by supporting system supporters or taking
over the enrolment entirely as a matter of public health
promotion.
Keywords: Informed Consent, Persons Living With HIV
(PLHIV), Text for Adherence (T4A).
©2023 by the Authors. This Article is an open access
article distributed under the terms and conditions of the
Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)