This paper reports findings
of a qualitative study and draws on the political ecology of health framework
to examine the links between housing and health among people living with
HIV/AIDS (PLWAs) in Northern Malawi in a wider context in which the epidemic has
overburdened the country’s hospitals, thereby transferring the responsibility
for care from government to families.
The findings suggest that poor housing
conditions, rooted in colonial and postcolonial policy failure, may undermine
the amount, as well as the quality, of palliative care available to PLWAs. It
was also found that the high cost of renting, discrimination, and poor
landlord-tenant relationships imposed significant financial and emotional
burden on PLWAs, thereby undermining their ability to meet dietary needs, stay
healthy, and adhere to treatment.
Furthermore, customary norms around property
inheritance hampered women’s housing security and their ability to cope with
the disease. The paper concludes by making relevant policy recommendations.
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