| New Hopkins Report on Successful
Health Communication
Baltimore, MD—Communication plays
a crucial role in successful family planning, HIV prevention,
and other health and development programs. Communication often
is thought of as the production of messages and materials,
such as postures or brochures. But effective communication
programs that motivate people to adopt healthy behaviors and
lifestyles use a systematic process and require long-term
commitment. Such behavior change communication (BCC) programs
have helped millions of people, according to the latest
issue of Population Reports, from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health.
Using a mix of three major communication channels—mass
media, interpersonal, and community channels—BCC programs
increase awareness about common health problems, influence
societal attitudes and norms, and promote healthy behaviors,
according to “Communication for Better Health,”
just published by the INFO Project at Johns Hopkins Center
for Communication Programs.
According to the comprehensive 28-page report, successful
BCC programs use a systematic process and behavioral theory
to develop messages tailored to specific audiences.
Over 100 million women in developing countries have an unmet
need for contraception, and communication is one of the best
ways to address underlying reasons, including social acceptability
of contraception and worries about contraceptive side effects.
BCC programs are also critical for reducing stigma on people
living with HIV and educating people about ways that the HIV
virus is spread and how to avoid it.
Illustrating the steps in planning, carrying out, and evaluating
BCC programs, the report provides diverse examples of well-executed
programs, including an Ethiopian radio drama promoting HIV
awareness and contraceptive use, and an Egyptian project combining
mass media, interpersonal communication, and community-level
channels to reach young married couples with timely messages
about postpartum care and family planning.
While "Communication for Better Health" and its
two companion INFO Reports issues, “Tools for Behavior
Change Communication” and “Entertainment-Education
for Better Health,” focus on reproductive health-related
BCC programs, the basic principles and processes apply to
all fields of health and development.
The three reports give a thorough summary of the steps needed
to plan, execute, and monitor and evaluate a BCC program,
including details about:
- A systematic and proven process that guides planning and
implementation, and helps to avoid mistakes and achieve
intended results.
- Scale-up of BCC activities and the cost-effectiveness
of doing so.
- Development of audience profiles, messages, and good-quality
materials that will move the audience.
- Measurement of progress towards objectives and various
types of evaluation designs.
- How to manage entertainment-education projects, within
the framework of the general process for delivering communication
programming.
- Media relations strategies to reach the public.
Find These Reports and Related Resources Online:
The full-text version of this 28-page Population Reports
issue is available at:
http://www.infoforhealth.org/short_url/?bccprsub
The full-text version of the 16-page companion INFO Reports
issue, “Entertainment-Education for Better Health”
is available at: http://www.infoforhealth.org/short_url/?eesub
The full-text version of the 8-page companion INFO Reports
issue, “Tools for Behavior Change Communication”
is available at: http://www.infoforhealth.org/short_url/?toolssub
To order this latest Population Reports issue and
its companion INFO Reports issue in print,
go to: http://www.jhuccp.org/cgi-bin/orders/orderform.cgi
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