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1.
Glob Health Sci Pract ; 3(4): 544-56, 2015 Nov 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26681703

ABSTRACT

A 35-month cluster randomized controlled trial was conducted in Burkina Faso to test whether a radio campaign focused on child health, broadcast between March 2012 and January 2015, could reduce under-5 mortality. This paper describes the design and implementation of the mass media intervention in detail, including the Saturation+ principles that underpinned the approach, the creative process, the lessons learned, and recommendations for implementing this intervention at scale. The Saturation+ approach focuses on the 3 core principles of saturation (ensuring high exposure to campaign messages), science (basing campaign design on data and modeling), and stories (focusing the dramatic climax on the target behavior) to maximize the impact of behavior change campaigns. In Burkina Faso, creative partnerships with local radio stations helped us obtain free airtime in exchange for training and investing in alternative energy supplies to solve frequent energy problems faced by the stations. The campaign used both short spots and longer drama formats, but we consider the short spots as a higher priority to retain during scale-up, as they are more cost-effective than longer formats and have the potential to ensure higher exposure of the population to the messages. The implementation research synthesized in this paper is designed to enable the effective adoption and integration of evidence-based behavior change communication interventions into health care policy and practice.


Subject(s)
Child Health , Communication , Developing Countries , Health Behavior , Health Promotion/methods , Radio , Adult , Burkina Faso , Child , Child Mortality , Child, Preschool , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Female , Health Policy , Humans , Infant , Infant Mortality , Mass Media
2.
Lancet ; 386(9988): 97-100, 2015 Jul 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25684587

ABSTRACT

Many people recognise that mass media is important in promoting public health but there have been few attempts to measure how important. An ongoing trial in Burkina Faso (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01517230) is an attempt to bring together the very different worlds of mass media and epidemiology: to measure rigorously, using a cluster-randomised design, how many lives mass media can save in a low-income country, and at what cost. Application of the Lives Saved Tool predicts that saturation-based media campaigns could reduce child mortality by 10-20%, at a cost per disability-adjusted life-year that is as low as any existing health intervention. In this Viewpoint we explain the scientific reasoning behind the trial, while stressing the importance of the media methodology used.


Subject(s)
Child Mortality , Health Promotion/methods , Mass Media , Burkina Faso , Child , Developing Countries , Health Care Costs/statistics & numerical data , Health Promotion/economics , Humans , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/methods
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