radio broadcasting health

50
July 2004

Upload: spa-herbi

Post on 25-Sep-2015

50 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

A Radio Health Program and its Role in society

TRANSCRIPT

  • July 2004

  • Radio Broadcasting for Health:An Issues Paper

    July 2004

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 1

  • This paper was written and edited by Dr. Andrew Skuse of the School ofSocial Sciences, University of Adelaide, with the support of Nadia Butler.Fiona Power and Nicola Woods of the Information and Communication forDevelopment team within the UKs Department for InternationalDevelopment (DFID) commissioned the work and provided criticalcommentary and support. Several people commented on and contributed tothe text. They include Mary Myers, Nicola Harford, Heather Budge-Reid andGordon Adam.

    Design by Grundy & Northedge

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 2

  • page number content

    Executive summary

    1. Introduction

    2. Research and evaluation, health messages and formats

    3. Community radio: opportunities and constraints

    4. Public and international radio: opportunities and constraints

    5. Radio for social mobilisation

    6. Building links for better health broadcasting

    7. Conclusion

    Appendix 1: Radio checklists

    Appendix 2: Popular radio formats

    Appendix 3: E-sources

    Appendix 4: References

    5-7

    8-11

    12-17

    18-21

    22-25

    26-27

    28-33

    34-35

    37-39

    40-43

    44

    45-48

    Contents

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 3

  • ACRONYMS

    AIDS

    AMARC

    BBC

    BBC AEP

    BBC WST

    BDO

    CATIA

    CBO

    CDC

    CSO

    DBU

    DFID

    DRC

    DTR

    FAO

    FHI

    FM

    HDN

    HIV

    ICD

    ICRC

    ICT

    Acquired Immune DeficiencySyndrome

    World Association ofCommunity Radio Broadcasters

    British BroadcastingCorporation

    BBC Afghan Education Projects

    BBC World Service Trust

    Building Digital Opportunities

    Catalysing Access to ICTs in Africa

    Community Based Organisation

    Centre for Disease Control

    Civil Society Organisation

    Development Broadcast Unit

    Department for InternationalDevelopment

    Democratic Republic of Congo

    Development Through Radio

    Food and AgricultureOrganisation

    Family Health International

    Frequency Modulation

    Health and DevelopmentNetworks

    Human Immunodeficiency Virus

    Information andCommunication forDevelopment

    International Committee of theRed Cross

    Information CommunicationTechnologies

    Kothmale Community Radio InternetProject

    Malawi Broadcasting Corporation

    Mother and Child Health

    Media Training Centre

    Non-government Organisation

    National Progressive Primary HealthCare Network

    People Living With HIV/AIDS

    Radio for Development

    South African BroadcastingCorporation

    Soweto Community Radio

    Short Wave

    Universal Declaration of HumanRights

    United Nations

    Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS

    UN Development Programme

    UN Educational Scientific andCultural Organisation

    UN High Commission for Refugees

    UN International Childrens Fund

    UN Development Fund for Women

    UN Office Coordination ofHumanitarian Assistance

    UN Office of Project Services

    World Health Organisation

    KCRIP

    MBC

    MCH

    MTC

    NGO

    NPPHCN

    PLWHA

    RFD

    SABC

    SCR

    SW

    UDHR

    UN

    UNAIDS

    UNDP

    UNESCO

    UNHCR

    UNICEF

    UNIFEM

    UNOCHA

    UNOPS

    WHO

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 4

  • ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    5

    This paper provides an overview of the role radio broadcasting

    can play in promoting better health for poor people. It has been

    conceptualised within the context of global efforts to reduce the

    burden of disease and ill health on poor people and advocates a

    people-centred and rights-based approach to health

    communications that emphasises:

    working with poor communities to gain an understanding of the

    full range of epidemiological, behavioural and risk taking factors

    that drive disease and ill health;

    designing communication initiatives that build on such

    interactions and which integrate social assessment data into

    communication outputs at all levels;

    multi-method approaches, i.e. a mix of interpersonal (peer

    education, counselling, etc.) and advocacy-based approaches

    combined with mass and community-based media interventions;

    community driven and led interventions that help the vulnerable

    and at risk to access useful and useable health information and

    build knowledge for social and behavioural change;

    poor peoples rights to information, freedom of expression and

    access to health services and education;

    DFID supports the creation of enabling environments in which

    radio - especially at community and national level - can flourish.

    It recognises the importance and popularity of technologies such

    as radio and supports the production of broadcast material

    relating to health and human development more broadly (Myers

    1998; Slater et al 2002)

    Executive summary

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 5

  • Radio broadcasting at community, national and international

    level contributes to improved health outcomes for poor people

    in a number of ways. Through:

    the stimulation of community dialogue and national debate;

    the provision of public information and specialised training

    about health risks and disease prevention;

    stimulating positive social and behavioural change, increasing

    community tolerance and decreasing levels of stigmatisation

    and discrimination;

    Further, this paper contextualises the relevance of radio as a

    strategic tool of human development and poverty reduction and

    examines its use by poor people. It addresses a range of issues

    from the role of formative research and evaluation, the

    development of health messages, to a range of format options

    widely used in health broadcasting. It also examines the

    community, public and international radio sectors and in the

    process highlights a range of opportunities and constraints that

    these sectors face;

    Likewise, it highlights key synergies and linkages that could be

    enhanced to improve access to health information for radio

    producers, the poor, the at risk and the vulnerable. In doing so,

    this paper raises a number of critical questions. For example:

    how can ministries of health, non-government organisations

    (NGOs) and community-based organisations (CBOs) be supported

    to become better providers of health information to, amongst

    others, radio broadcasters?

    6

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 6

  • what capacity needs to be built, especially at community and

    national levels, to enhance health broadcasting? For example, do

    broadcasters feel confident in adapting the health information

    that they acquire from a range of diverse sources for broadcast?

    how can radio be used to mobilise communities towards social

    action? For example, to claim their rights to relevant health

    services and voice their needs?

    is the community radio sector the most appropriate mechanism

    for strengthening both community voice and dialogue on

    health? What opportunities and constraints face the sector?

    what role does national public broadcasting play in contributing

    to better health for poor people? Can it maintain a public

    service ethic in the face of competition from community and

    commercial broadcasters? How can it best be supported to fulfil

    a public service role?

    what are the opportunities and implications for the radio sector of

    the broader availability of new information communication

    technologies? How can Internet and e-mail best be used to support

    better health broadcasting? Will radio, as a medium of the poor,

    remain relevant in the South?

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    7

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 7

  • In R

    wa

    nd

    a,

    for

    ev

    ery

    1 t

    ele

    vis

    ion

    th

    ere

    are

    10

    1 r

    ad

    io s

    ets

    national or public, commercial andinternational. These can bedefined in the following terms:

    Community radio refers to radiostations that are situated withinthe community, which serve thecommunity and which are staffedby a broad cross-section ofcommunity members. Suchstations tend to have a strongcommitment to local particpation,social inclusion and social orcommunity development; (AMARC 2000)

    Public radio refers to radio thatserves the public interest and whichmay be state owned and run, orstate funded and independent (i.e.the BBC model). Within this sectorbroadcasting at both national andlocal level occurs, with local publicbroadcasting charged withreflecting issues of local relevance.Many state run and/or controlledpublic radio networks in the Southare overtly propagandist and aresocially exclusive, rather thaninclusive, i.e. they may activelyfavour certain discrete ethnic,religious, political or language groups;

    Commercial radio at national andlocal level tends to have little or nopublic service commitment andstations are generally run for profit,carry advertising and oftenbroadcast substantial amounts ofpopular music. Though not aprincipal focus of this paper,opportunities do exist within thecommercial radio sector, throughensuring public servicecommitments as a requirement oflicensing, for enhancing the healthinformation environment;

    Donors have a role to play inbuilding broadcasting sectors thatare both sustainable anddedicated to improving the healthof poor people. Donor interest inthe social and developmental roleof radio is strong and is groundedin the recognition of the ubiquityof radio as the dominantcommunications technology thatis used by poor people (UNAIDS1999). In this respect, Buckleyobserves that:

    Radio is a technology withlow production costs, with lowinfrastructure costs and withmarginal costs of distribution closeto zero. As an aural medium, itdoes not exclude those who areunable to read or write and it isideally suited to conveyingcontent in vernacular languages.For these reasons it is perhapsunsurprising that radio hasbecome an intimate and pervasivepresence throughout thedeveloped world and, at the sametime, has penetrated into theremotest areas of the poorestcountries. (2000: 3)

    A significant expansion of radio-based interventions for health atinternational, national andcommunity levels has occurred inrecent years (see Dagron 2001). Inpart, this is due to thederegulation of the airwaves thathas occurred in many developingcountries and recognition thatradio is a cheap and effectivemeans of communicating issuesrelating to health, policy andhealth service delivery.1

    Radio, as a sector, can be brokendown into a number of sub-sectors such as community,

    8

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    11.1

    1.2

    Introduction

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 8

  • BOX 1

    The Cost of ICT Access

    In extremely poor countries, such as

    Afghanistan or Rwanda owning and

    running ICTs represent a significant one-

    off and recurrent expense. For example,

    a cheap FM/SW radio set will cost from

    US$10 upwards, with replacement

    batteries costing approximately US$0.50-

    1.00 per month. For the extremely poor

    living on $1 per day or less, such

    expense is significant, but tends to be

    justified in terms of technologies such as

    radio constituting an essential

    information channel. Access to

    traditional media such as radio and

    television is critical if broader

    information inclusion is to occur. In the

    delivery of health and education

    especially, the significance of terrestrial

    technologies remains highly relevant to

    the poor.

    (Myers et al. 2000)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    9

    International radio services, oftenbroadcast in multiple languages, fulfila role that is part public service (oftenwith a national or regional focus),news service and entertainmentfocused. Many international servicesare overtly propagandist and oftenreflect the foreign policy concerns ofthe countries from which they are broadcast.

    The radio sector constitutes one ofthe many fields from which poorpeople gain information relevant totheir own health and wellbeing.2

    However, focusing upon radioaffords us an opportunity toexamine how donor funds cansupport better practice in healthbroadcasting and radio-based healthadvocacy. It also provides anopportunity to examine how aspecific communication sector withina wider range of communicationchannels and initiatives helps tocontribute to improved humandevelopment outcomes.

    Radio and the poor

    The recent UNESCO World CultureReport (2000) reveals that levels ofradio ownership in the South aresignificant and in certain contextsradio represents a criticalinformation lifeline for poor men,women and children. Comparativeanalysis of the density of radio andtelevision ownership shows that inextremely poor countries such asRwanda, for every television setowned there are 101 radio sets.Similarly, in Nepal there are 7.1radios owned per television set, inSierra Leone and Ethiopia thisfigure stands at 20.8 and 43.9radios per television respectively.

    The UN ICT task force (2002) addsweight to this assessment, notingthat of the 816 million peopleliving in Africa in 2001, 1 in 4 havea radio (205 million people), 1 in13 own a television (62 millionpeople), 1 in 40 have a terrestrialtelephone line (20 million people)and 1 in 160 use the Internet (5million people). They identify that:

    Radio is still by far the mostdominant mass medium in Africawith ownership of radio setsbeing far higher than any otherelectronic device... It is estimatedthat over 60 percent of thepopulation of the sub-continentare reached by existing radiotransmitter networks whilenational television coverage islargely confined to major towns.(UN ICT Task Force 2002: 5)

    Such evidence highlights therelevance of radio to the poor andits potential as a tool for healthbroadcasting. However, mediaownership is not equallydistributed amongst the rich andpoor and whilst televisionownership is burgeoning withincertain countries (i.e. China andparts of Central Asia), televisionremains largely beyond the reachof the poorest.

    Whilst radio is a less costlymedium and is more evenlydistributed amongst the poor, thevery poorest often find it hard toafford both radio sets and theregular purchase of batteries.Nonetheless, ownership statisticstend to belie the significantamount of group or social radiolistening that occurs in the Southi.e. a village shop may have aradio set to entice listeners and

    1.3

    1.4

    1.5

    1.6

    1.7

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 9

  • Douentza, MALI.

    Dogon women listening to the radio as

    they work.

    Rhodri Jones / Panos Pictures

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 10

  • customers, or a radio listeningclub may be formed to improvecommunity access to information.Further, access to radio and otherICTs may be highly genderedwithin certain contexts, leading tomarked disparities in healthinformation equality.

    Equally important is the extent towhich radio provides a focus forcommunity discussion anddialogue. Through everyday socialcommunication practices, gossip,debate, chat, etc. health inform-ation may be passed from radiolisteners to non-listeners, and inthe process the boundariesbetween targeted risk groups,audiences and wider societalimpacts become blurred. Forexample, few existing studies ofradio and public health make the link between broadcastingand the passage of inform-ation within communities as social communication.

    Little qualitative data exists on theactive strategies poor peopleemploy to obtain healthinformation, be it from healthprofessionals, friends, neighboursor ICTs.3 Though strong evidenceexists regarding gender, povertyand information inequality(Marcelle 2000), there are gaps inour understanding of thestrategies that women, forinstance whose public mobilitymay be constrained due tocultural norms, use to gather oraccess information concerninghealth. However, we do know thatthroughout the South women andchildren tend to have lower accessto communications technologiesthan men, and the dynamics of

    this trend requires furtherinvestigation since inequality inaccess to information can result inserious inequalities in access tohealth services, despite the oftenexplicit targeting of healthservices at women and children inthe South (UNDP 2001).

    Addressing the health informationneeds of the poorest requires amulti-stranded approach tobuilding infrastructural capacity,institutional capacity andproviding content. We do need toincrease access to newtechnologies for poor people, butwe must also be practical and costeffective and recognise that thetraditional technologies thatpoor people use to obtaininformation, as well asentertainment, have a strategicrole to play in realising betterhealth outcomes for the poorest.

    Footnotes

    The cost of the equipment necessary to

    set up a community radio station can

    vary from between US$3,500-10,000.

    The Commonwealth of Learning have

    pioneered low cost suitcase radio

    stations that contain the broadcast and

    transmitting equipment capable of

    broadcasting within a 50 km radius.

    The kit uses commonly available

    components and is cheap to maintain

    and run (Commonwealth of Learning).

    The cost of licences, for example for

    community radio stations, varies widely

    and is context specific, i.e. from US$25

    in Canada to US$625 in Nepal per

    annum (Nepal Media).

    Social communications (discussion,

    debate, gossip, etc.) and participatory

    communications (theatre, dance, song,

    etc.) for development are dealt with in

    detail in Burke, A. 1999.

    Communications and Development: a

    Practical Guide, Social Development

    Department, DFID, UK. Access to and

    use of other information

    communication technologies (ICTs)

    such as printed media, video, Internet,

    e-mail, television and film can enhance

    the chances that both individuals and

    communities will act on health

    information and put that information

    into practice as disease prevention or

    risk reduction knowledge.

    This is compounded by a general lack

    of health data in priority countries

    which is reflected in recognition of the

    need to build statistical, but also

    behavioural, research capacity in the

    South (UNDP 2003).

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    11

    1.8

    1.9

    1.10

    1

    2

    3

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 11

  • This section examines the role ofresearch and evaluation in healthbroadcasting. It examines howthey inform the development ofcontext specific and communityrelevant health messages, theidentification of risk groups andidentification of media uses andformat preferences.

    A long standing criticism of massmedia has been that they are one-way channels, that can, forexample, tell people about health,human rights or small enterprisedevelopment, but cannot allow theaudience to talk back or getinvolved. Community media areincreasingly being seen as a solutionto this very particular problem,namely, the issue of the social andcultural distance of media producersfrom their audiences.

    Formative research and evaluationhave become critical componentsof health broadcasting in theSouth. This is especially so forlarger and better-fundedinitiatives, such as the multi-mediaoutputs of Soul City, South Africa,which provide information in arange of formats on issues asdiverse as HIV/AIDS andhypertension (Tufte 2001). Forcommunity radio stations, whichare usually run with a minimum offinancial support, formative andsystematic impact evaluationremains largely out of reach.However, Fordred and Lloyd(1998), Porras (1998) and Skuse(1998) all highlight mechanisms,from simple evaluation strategies,to developing listener feedbackgroups that enhance healthbroadcasting through locallyderived contextual information.

    12

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    22.1

    2.2

    2.3

    Research and evaluation, health messages and formats

    BOX 2

    The role of research and evaluation

    Specific research and impact evaluation

    regimes are now routinely established

    within communication initiatives and

    are used to enhance their quality and

    relevance in a number of specific ways:

    through formative or baseline research

    in particpation with communities that

    examines issues such as risk taking,

    health seeking behaviour, routine

    hygiene and sanitation practices,

    information needs, media access, use

    and preferences, and which guides the

    production of health broadcasts in

    terms of both message content and

    style. This process can also help

    decision makers to assess whether

    radio is the most appropriate medium

    for addressing the health issue at hand

    or for reaching a specific risk group;

    by undertaking a desk review of

    existing secondary information

    concerning the given health issue.

    This helps reduce the amount of

    duplication of research;

    through the definition of qualitative

    and quantitative indicators that are

    relevant, targeted, measurable

    and achievable;

    through the identification and

    definition of key audiences and risk

    groups for health broadcasting;

    through the testing of outputs and

    health messages with audiences;

    through evaluation of the impact of

    health broadcasting with audiences;

    through adaptation of outputs so that

    broadcasting remains responsive to the

    shifting health information needs of

    poor men, women and children.

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 12

  • ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    13

    2.5

    BOX 3

    Evaluating the Programme Effects ofa Radio Drama about AIDS in Zambia

    Focusing on a Zambian radio drama,

    Nshilakamona, a study was undertaken to

    assess the effectiveness of methods used to

    analyse the impact of radio drama on

    peoples behaviour and knowledge in

    relation to HIV/AIDS. The results of surveys

    undertaken immediately before and after

    the programme was aired in 1991 found

    that while Zambias population as a whole

    had improved its knowledge regarding

    AIDS, and to an extent reduced risky

    behaviour, such changes could not be

    attributed directly to the drama itself. This

    conclusion was drawn because groups with

    high access to radios and groups with low

    access both increased their awareness

    levels at the same rate. The fact that no

    changes could be directly attributed to the

    drama may be due to the method of

    evaluation and does not imply that radio

    dramas are ineffective. At the time that

    the radio drama was aired, many other

    sources of information regarding AIDS

    were available, making it problematic to

    attribute changes over time to one single

    programme. Also, due to the short time

    frame of the evaluation process, long-term

    changes were unable to be detected. This

    highlights the need for rigour in

    evaluation processes and recognition that

    attributing complex behavioural changes

    to mass media, without accounting for

    other structural factors which affect health,

    is extremely difficult.

    (Yoder et al. 1996)

    The findings of this work suggest that:

    community stations and nationalradio interventions for health thathave small budgets should not beburdened with unrealisticformative and evaluative researchcomponents. Despite this, effortsshould be made to establishaudience feedback mechanisms(simple evaluation, listenersletters, phone-ins, competitions)that are in line with the scale ofthe intervention, i.e. 10% of theoverall project budget could beset aside;

    formative research and evaluationskills are low within the publicand community sectors and (thisapplies equally to internationalbroadcasters) an emphasis hasbeen placed on identifyinggeneral audience share, ratherthan on understanding healthbehaviour or the qualitativeimpact of health broadcasting;

    capacity needs to be built at localand national levels throughtraining in formative research andevaluation skills that are practicaland useable.

    Often, communicationinterventions for health havebeen perceived as magic bullets,with the power of media alonecapable of delivering healthbehaviour changes and riskreduction, regardless of thecomplexity of the health issue.HIV/AIDS and long donor, NGOand CBO involvement inawareness and educationcampaigns have taught us thatbehaviour change and risk

    2.4

    reduction requires holisticinterventions, of which radio andcommunication more generally,represent one component. Recentpapers such as The PanosInstitutes (2002) guidance onHIV/AIDS and communication echothis stance and suggest a shiftaway from difficult to achieveshort term goals relating toindividual behaviour changetowards the more realisticobjective of raising communitydialogue and public debateconcerning health.

    If raising community dialogue andsubsequently social, rather thanindividual, behavioural change areperceived as the ultimate goals ofbroadcast interventions for health,then this refocusing places apremium on the quality andrelevance of health messages andthe need for accurate and useablehealth information within radiostations. It also entails a shift inemphasis in impact evaluation,from quantitative data concerningmortality and abstract measures ofknowledge acquisition toqualitative assessment about thecommunity dialogue that eachintervention stirs and a moresubtle understanding of poorpeoples health information needs.

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 13

  • Burkina Faso.

    Live debate on football and witchcraft on

    Radio Vive le Paysan, based at Sapone,

    40km south of the capital Ouagadougou.

    This debate is the equivalent of a phone-in

    except that no-one has a phone so

    participants cycle in from the surrounding

    area and gather in the studio. Some,

    hearing the broadcast at home, turn up

    during the programme wanting to take

    part in the debate. The station gives a voice

    to the surrounding villages, broadcasts are

    in the local language.

    Crispin Hughes / Panos Pictures

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 14

  • Health messages

    Formative research and ongoingevaluation help producers toidentify what is important tocommunicate and how it shouldbe communicated. The healthinformation contained withinradio broadcasting is usuallyreferred to as health messages.Health messages if well researchedand carefully produced can anddo contribute to better health forpoor people (CDC 1999).

    Didactic health message-giving orfear-based messages relating tohealth and risk should be avoided.Such messages tend to reinforceprejudice, self and social stigmaand are generally counter-productive (Singhal and Rogers2003). Early examples of publicinformation campaigns in theWest typify this approach, theslogan promoted in the UK AIDS:dont die of ignorance providedno positive message, no informa-tion that could be acted upon andlabelled people living withHIV/AIDS (PLWHA) as ignorant.

    Effective communication can helpindividuals and communities toengage in healthy and health-seeking behaviour. This can beachieved by positively influencingvariables such as self-efficacy (theconfidence in ones own ability toperform a behaviour), outcomeexpectations (the expected resultof performing a behaviour),knowledge, perceived risk andsocial norms, whilst locating thisindividual behaviour change inthe wider socio- economic andcultural environment (Galavotti et al. 2001)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    15

    BOX 4

    Social change communicationindicators

    Example indicators relevant to health

    broadcasting include:

    expanded public and private

    dialogue and debate;

    increased accuracy of the information

    that people share in the dialogue

    and debate;

    the means available that enable

    people and communities to feed their

    voices into debate and dialogue;

    increased leadership and agenda

    setting role by disadvantaged people

    on issues of concern resonates with

    the major issues of interest to

    peoples everyday interests;

    linked people and groups with

    similar interests who might otherwise

    not be in contact.

    2.6

    2.7

    2.8

    BOX 5

    The Impact of Multimedia FamilyPlanning on the ContraceptiveBehaviour of Women in Tanzania

    A multimedia family planning promotion

    campaign conducted in Tanzania between

    1991 and 1994 aimed to increased

    contraceptive use. Evaluation found a

    strong link between exposure to family

    planning messages in the mass media and

    contraceptive use. It found that the more

    types of media that women were exposed

    to, the more likely they were to practice

    contraception. Among the different

    media used in the campaign (radio,

    television, print materials and a

    promotional logo), radio was found to be

    the most popular source of family

    planning information, reaching 49% of

    survey respondents. 9 out of 10

    respondents who recalled hearing family

    planning messages in the media cited

    radio as one of their main sources. A

    radio drama dealing with family planning

    messages, Zinduka! ("Wake Up!"), was

    assessed independently and found to

    have been especially successful. Women

    who recalled the drama were more likely

    than others to talk about family planning

    with their spouses, to visit health facilities

    and to use contraceptives. Though radio

    was the most popular source of

    information, the study led to the

    conclusion that multiple media sources

    appear to be complementary rather than

    duplicative, as the more media avenues

    that people were exposed to, the more

    their attitudes and behaviour were likely

    to change. It is also recommended that

    regular reinforcement of messages is

    needed if continued use of contraceptives

    is to be made. Attitudinal and

    behavioural change is a long-term

    process, and scattered family planning

    messages and short-term campaigns are

    unlikely to provide adequate support to

    current or prospective contraceptive users.

    (Jato et al. 1999)

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 15

  • 16

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    Simulating dialogue on healthissues requires that theinformation exchanged within it isaccurate and useable. In turn, thisplaces special emphasis on therelevance of the health messagesthat lie at the heart of healthbroadcasting. Many examples existof poorly targeted, confusing oreven detrimental messages. Keymessage issues include:

    Sensitivity. For example, messagesregarding safe sex and familyplanning may be opposed incertain cultural contexts;

    Credible content. For example,health messages must beunderstandable and provide amessage that a listener canreasonably implement inbehaviour, i.e. if advocatingcondom use in poor communities,condoms should be locallyavailable and cheap;

    Conflicting messages. Forexample, radio stations withdifferent perspectives on healthissues such as family planning maybroadcast messages that activelyoppose each other leading toconfusion amongst listeners;

    Gender equity. For exampleshealth issues are gendered andaddressing an issue such as familyplanning or birth spacing onlyfrom the perspective of women isinadequate, the roles andresponsibilities of men must alsobe addressed.

    Given the widely accepted needfor detailed formative researchand ongoing evaluation of impact,the predefinition of healthmessages in radio interventionsshould be viewed with suspicion,especially when the intentionexists to work with vulnerablecommunities and specific riskgroups. This suggests assumptionshave been made about whatconstitutes appropriate andrelevant health information.Examination of research andevaluation structures, as well asthe goals defined within projectdocumentation will help deskofficers assess whether theintervention is:a) taking an iterative approach tocommunity information needs anddialogue building or;b) a more didactic and lessrigorous alternative.

    BOX 6

    Principles of message design

    Messages should be:

    well researched and evaluated;

    non-technical and non-didactic;

    non-judgemental and inclusive;

    gender sensitive;

    accurate and useable;

    culturally appropriate;

    sensitive to local needs;

    carefully worded to aid clarity

    and understanding;

    reinforced through multiple broadcasts.

    2.9 2.10

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 16

  • 2.11

    2.12

    though this may be increasedthrough the charging of airtimefees to external agencies;

    The cost, complexity and skillrequired to produce a radio soapopera generally places it out ofthe reach of smaller communitystations and firmly locates itwithin larger, often multi-method,interventions;

    Availability of useful and useablehealth information can also be afactor in the choice of radioformats by certain stations. Forexample, community radiopresenters may not feel confidentenough, given that most have noformal training in healthbroadcasting, to address acomplex health issue such asHIV/AIDS beyond providing simplemessages regarding safe sex andcondom use.

    The impact that specific formatshave from country-to-countryvaries according to the nature ofthe media environment, i.e. mediacomplexity and density of radioaccess and use, as well as localisedtastes and format preferences(Skuse 2002). This diversity placesa critical emphasis onunderstanding the needs, in termsof both health information andentertainment, of radio audiencesand upon formative research toguide intervention design. Theprincipal radio formats used inhealth broadcasting areelaborated in Appendix 2, alongwith relevant examples.

    Which format?

    Though each format exampleprovided in Appendix 2 has beenused to good effect to address arange of health issues, their choiceand subsequent use byinternational, public andcommunity broadcasters dependson a number of key factors:

    Who the broadcaster intends totarget. For example, certainformats may be used to providespecific information to specificaudiences. Here, advocacy effortsthat target policymakers andlegislators may require a verydifferent approach to that ofdisease prevention within specificrisk groups;

    Available financial resources,technical and creative capacity canlimit the scope of interventions.For example, the cost ofproducing a spot on local ornational radio may be minimal,

    Radio formats

    Identifying and understanding themedia uses and preferences ofgroups at risk from disease andwider radio audiences is critical toproducing health broadcastingthat has the ability to create animpact that contributes to therealisation of the Millennium,Development Goals and Targets.Knowing what is popular, be itsoap operas, comedy, phone-ins,factual programmes and so on,enable project planners andproducers to design healthcommunication strategies thattarget a number of strategicaudiences, such as:

    policymakers, politicians orlegislators;general public;specific risk groups andcommunities.

    A broad range of radio formats areused to address an equally broadrange of health issues. Though it iswidely agreed that the mosteffective health communicationsare those that raise communitydialogue, i.e. through soap operas,magazine formats, mini-dramas,and radio phone-ins, less target-specific formats, such as routinenews, short spots (a simplemessage conveyed quickly) andslogans, can also reinforce orhighlight key health messages forthe general public.

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    17

    2.13

    2.14

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 17

  • Community radio resonates tolocal concerns and needs, itbroadcasts in local languages thatare often ignored by publicbroadcasters and is run bycommunity members. It can beestablished to serve specificgroups, as does Radio Mineras(miners radio) in Bolivia, or it canaddress specific themes, as doesRadio Sagarmatha which has afocus on environmentalsustainability (Dagron 2001).

    Community radio is recognised bymany donors and developingcountry governments as a tool foradvocacy, civil societystrengthening, better governanceand accountability (Rodriguez2001, cited in Tacchi 2002). Assuch, community radio can bethought of as a lever for therealisation of poor peoples rights.Typically, poor people are exposedto greater health risks than thenon-poor by virtue of theirrelative poverty, disempowermentand inability to realise their rightsin a number of areas, such asworkers rights, rights to healthservices and rights to education.Fundamental to each of theserights-related fields is that of thehuman right to freedom ofinformation enshrined within the1948 Universal Declaration ofHuman Rights (UDHR) that states:

    Everyone has the right tofreedom of opinion andexpression: this right includesfreedom to hold opinions withoutinterference and to seek, receiveand impact information and ideasthrough any media and regardlessof frontiers.(Quoted in Linden1999: 419)

    The important role that communityradio plays in giving a voice tocommunity issues is reflected in theincreasing focus of donors onstrengthening the sector (Gersterand Zimmermann 2003). Thederegulation of radio has resulted inthe flourishing of empowered andcritical voices in places such as SouthAfrica, Nepal and Bolivia.Furthermore, community radio playsa fundamental role in raising andaddressing community health issues.As such, it is placed at the vanguardof efforts to address diseases such asHIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria.

    Community radio is community-based and is run for the benefit ofthe community. It differs from localradio in as much as it is independentfrom larger state broadcastingnetworks, their content andperspective, and adheres to licensingrequirements concerning communityparticipation and service. The focuson local concerns is reflected in thetypical mission statement of RadioZibonele in Cape Town, SouthAfrica, which reveals both the levelof community ownership andcommitment to local development:

    We are a group of volunteerswith diverse skills, who have formeda Community Radio Station owned,managed and programmed by thecommunity of Khayelitsha. Ourconcern is to enhance the quality oflife through improving the healthstandards of our people. All thosewe serve are affected by poor healthand poor environmental conditions.Radio Zibonele is committed tosharing skills and informationthrough honest process, in the wayempowering the community ofKhayelitsha to have a better life.(AMARC 2000: 26)

    18

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    33.1

    3.2

    3.3

    3.4

    Community radio:opportunities and constraints

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 18

  • BOX 8

    Soweto Community Radio (SCR),Gauteng, South Africa

    SCR broadcasts from the heart of

    Soweto and was established in the early

    1990s to fill a community information

    deficit for the huge township

    population who were previously serviced

    by the South African Broadcasting

    Corporation (SABC). In 1998 it was

    estimated that the listenership of the

    station was as high as 115,000 people.

    SCR is committed to health broadcasting

    and takes a range of externally

    produced radio programmes, as well as

    producing its own. The station regularly

    uses material produced by the Media

    and Training Centre (MTC), which is

    affiliated to the National Progressive

    Primary Health Care Network (NPPHCN),

    both of whom provide support to South

    African community radio broadcasters.

    Externally produced MTC material

    addresses a wide range of health issues,

    from HIV/AIDS awareness to child health

    and much MTC material is integrated

    into the day to day broadcasting of SCR.

    In terms of self-produced broadcasts,

    SCR produces the popular Lovers Plus

    Talkback Show, an interview, discussion

    and phone-in based format, that fills the

    mid morning chit-chit slot every

    Wednesday. The show has run

    continuously on SCR since it first began

    broadcasting and today each show

    receives around 2,000 calls concerning

    HIV/AIDS, family planning and gender

    issues. The production costs are

    extremely low at around US$3,000 for

    six months of broadcasting and the

    station feel that impact is high, based on

    informal discussions with local listeners.

    This is due, in part, to the appeal of the

    shows host and its ability to raise

    community issues relating to sexual

    behaviour that had not previously been

    openly discussed in Soweto.

    (Fordred and Lloyd 1998)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    19

    3.5

    3.6

    3.7

    Though non-binding, and perhapsbecause of this, Linden (1999)identifies that information-relatedrights are violated widely. This isevidenced by widespreadviolations against the press andthe fact that only 22% of theworlds population have access toindependent media, in spite ofover 50% of this population livingin countries who describethemselves as democratic.Control of national media bySouthern governments and elitevested interests represents acritical problem that canpotentially be addressed throughthe development of robust policyon peoples [basic] right tocommunication (Linden 1999: 421).

    The emergence of the communityradio sector in parts of Africa,Latin America and Asia hasenhanced poor peoples right tocommunication and can bethought of as an expression andindicator of broader politicalchange and democratisation (seeDagron 2001). From thisperspective, we can think ofcommunity or citizen radio as ameans through whichcommunities are able to staketheir right to a range of servicesand engage local and nationalgovernment in dialogue abouttheir own needs and constraints.

    From a democratising perspective,community or citizen radiorepresents a key mechanism formonitoring community servicessuch as health service delivery.Communities who are empoweredwith a voice are able to criticallyquestion issues such as health

    BOX 7

    The Expansion of the CommunityRadio Sector in South Africa

    Prior to the transition to a one-person-

    one-vote democratic system in 1994, the

    Independent Broadcasting Authority Act

    of 1993 had already laid the foundations

    for community radio broadcasting. The

    aim of the act was to develop localised

    media in poor rural and urban areas

    that served previously disenfranchised

    South Africans. The act made provision

    for four-year licences to be granted,

    with one-year interim licences being

    suggested whilst the bill was

    implemented. However, the framework

    was not fully defined until 1997, after

    which further delays in implementing

    the act and the large number of licence

    applications received further slowed the

    process. The relative failure of the South

    African regulatory structures to

    adequately cope with the demand for

    community radio licences left many

    having to re-apply each year for renewal

    licences, placing further strain upon an

    already congested system. The long and

    costly process involved in renewal

    resulted in many stations going off-air.

    The National Community Radio Forum

    of South Africa identifies that up to half

    of its 100 strong membership is off-air at

    any one time.

    (Tacchi 2002)

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 19

  • Botswana.

    Community radio for school children.

    Giacomo Pirozzi / Panos Pictures

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 20

  • 3.10

    3.11

    service standards and equity ofaccess. With support and trainingthe community radio sector hasthe potential to become anincreasingly powerful advocate forpoor peoples rights to healthservices. Nonetheless, we shouldbe mindful of the potential forcommunity radio to be capturedby those with vested interests, i.e.for political purposes, religious orstatus reasons. Communitystations can become more overtlymusic oriented as the interests ofpopular young presenters come todominate station organisation.

    Community radio has expandedrapidly in the South in the pastdecade as deregulation has movedforward. Significant donorinvestment in the sector hasoccurred in recent years via multi-institutional programmes such asDFIDs Building DigitalOpportunities (BDO) and the newCatalysing Access to ICTs in Africa(CATIA) initiative, both of whichrecognise convergence of newtechnologies (such as the Internet)with existing technologies (such asradio) as a key opportunity tobring the information revolutionassociated with globalisation tothe poor.

    The community radio sector isbroadly perceived as a tool oflocal empowerment that isparticipatory and which is set upwith the purpose of responding toor giving voice to local needs andconcerns, health included (AMARC2000). As Slater, Tacchi and Lewisnote, local events tend to betreated as primary, and the rangeof media are understood andexperienced largely in relation to

    the local community (2002: 25).From this perspective, we canidentify both the potentialpopularity of local media and itscorresponding potential toprovide public health informationthat has a true local flavour andimpact (cf. Myers 1998 oncommunity engagement withlocal media in Mali).

    Despite the participatory approachadvocated in numerouscommunity radio charters, withregard to the South Africancommunity radio sector, Fordredand Lloyd (1998) identify thatstations are often characterised by:

    poor internal communications;status conflicts between paid andunpaid staff;gender inequality;understaffing and overwork;little or no crisis or conflict;management capacity.

    Moreover, community radio may:

    be subject to politicisation andpolarisation;divisive if it ignores the certainethnic and linguistic groups it ismandated to serve;be subject to capture by specificinterest groups.

    Whilst community radio stationsmay be severely constrained bylack of funding, which in turn canimpact upon their ability toproduce more sophisticated healthprogramming such as soap operasor drama, they are nonethelesscapable of producing excitingbroadcasting (eg. live talk-shows,vox-pop and interviews) that iscost effective, that is capable of

    tackling sensitive health issues andwhich is often hugely popularlocally. This is because:

    community radio stationsbroadcast in local languages andaccents, lending credence to theirlocal authenticity;

    staff are embedded within thecommunities they serve and areusually fully aware of the criticalhealth issues and their socialramifications, such as HIV/AIDS.However, there is also the risk thatthey may reflect the biases, mis-conceptions, and inequalities thatexist within the same community;

    local staff provide a continualcommunity dialogue that allowsstations to respond quickly to community needs.

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    21

    3.8

    3.9

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 21

  • 4.4

    4.5

    worked together to create aspecialist-broadcasting unit calledthe Development Broadcasting Unitthat sits within MBC, rather than inthe national health ministry. Theunit produces a range ofprogramme material relating tohealth, to service delivery, andbroader development issues (DFID2000a). Further, as nationalbroadcasters come under fundingpressures, the national and localpublic airwaves are increasinglybeing opened up to NGOs and CBOssupporting better health.

    Health promotion and broadcastingunits, where they have beenestablished, often sit withinMinistries of Health or specialisthealth education institutes, as is thecase in China (Skuse, Slavin andAdam 2002). Such units tend to havea poor record when it comes toproducing entertaining, yetinformative, radio programmes. Thisis because such units are oftenremoved from mainstreambroadcasters, such as public orcommunity radio stations, areremoved from the associatednational and local broadcast talentand because health specialists rarelymake lively broadcasters.

    Nonetheless, the need still exists fordialogue between broadcasters andhealth specialists to the mutualbenefit of the listener, becauseregardless of how healthinformation is packaged, it isessential that health messages areaccurate. Health Unlimited hassuccessfully worked to integrateMinistries of Health in mediaprojects in Nicaragua, Rwanda,Somalia, Cambodia and China. Byincluding representatives from the

    Public broadcasting

    The effects of deregulation of theradio sector can result in pressurebeing brought to bear on thesustainability of national and localpublic (state) broadcastingsystems. This affects ruralpopulations more than urban orperi-urban populations who areincreasingly served withcommunity and commercial radioalternatives. The resultantincreases in information inequalitycompound the increasing urban-rural human development dividethat the UNDP identify (2003: 49-50). Though donors and NGOs areoften reluctant to engage withnational broadcasters, examplesdo exist where strategic supportto national public broadcastershas been offered and accepted.

    Supporting national broadcastersto become better healthbroadcasters represents a long-term commitment that hassignificant funding implicationsfor donors. In poor countrieswhere innovation and productionskills may be lacking, low levels oftechnical infrastructure also exist.Furthermore, the production ofbetter quality health broadcastingmay be compounded by weaktransmitter capacity and poorquality recording equipment.

    Whilst major technicalinfrastructural overhaul ofnational broadcast systems isunlikely in the context of healthsector work, considerable progresshas been made with skills building.In Malawi, the Malawi BroadcastingCorporation (MBC) and UK-basedRadio for Development have

    22

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    44.1

    4.2

    4.3

    Public and international radio:opportunities and constraints

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 22

  • Ministries in the design process, theradio content, be it soap operas orphone in programmes, can beinclusive of government efforts andinclusive of topical campaigns andnational issues. In China andCambodia, Health Unlimited trainspublic health extension workers toengage in participatory audiencefocus groups at village level andfeed back findings into policy and programming.

    Increasingly, public broadcasters arelooking for partnerships with donorsand the NGO/CBO sector. This is inresponse to reductions in statefunding for radio and the expansionof the more innovative commercialand community radio sectors.Airtime fees are levied for suchbroadcast work and though fees areoften modest and significantly lessthan commercial advertising rates,they do represent a constraint forsmaller organisations.

    Donors can play a key role insupporting national and local publicbroadcast systems to become moresustainable, better skilled,innovative and equitable, especiallyin their approach to smallercommunity developmentorganisations. Support for thedevelopment of commercialisationpolicies and strategies could helppublic broadcasters become moreresponsive to NGOs and CBOs andthe health programmes that theyseek to promote. Furthermore, thesustainability of public service radiois critical to the rural poor for manyof whom it still constitutes aninformational lifeline.

    BOX 10

    Radio in China, an unfulfilled potential

    Confusion as to what constitutes

    effective health broadcasting is often

    evident amongst broadcasters, many of

    whom have no formal training in

    development communications, but have

    a public service remit to broadcast on

    health-related topics. High levels of

    radio penetration are offset by

    top-down content developed without

    reference to audience need,

    understanding or participation. Recent

    evidence from China shows that at the

    local level radio is often used to

    promote private clinics that offer

    untested clinical treatments for diseases

    as diverse as Hepatitis and TB. Similarly,

    large pharmaceutical companies are able

    to buy radio and television slots to

    advertise medicines and tonics that

    make bold health claims, but which poor

    people can ill-afford. Aggressive

    advertising of this nature may increase

    the incidence of polypharmacy (taking

    multiple courses of medicine to treat the

    same illness) and the health risks that go

    with it. Such broadcasting is

    supplemented by very didactic national-

    level programming that features

    technical responses to specific disease

    related-questions. Unfortunately,

    financial resources in the radio sector in

    China are very limited, yet radio remains

    the information mainstay for many of

    the extremely poor and especially for

    ethnic minorities, who often find it

    difficult to access health services due to

    both discrimination and

    geographical remoteness.

    (Skuse, Slavin and Adam 2002)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    23

    4.6

    4.7

    BOX 9

    Haka-Haki Radio (Radio Face-to-Face),Radio Nepal.

    Radio Nepal no longer receives state

    subsidies and over the past few years has

    been forced to adopt a commercial

    approach to its broadcasting through the

    sale of air time to commercial interests,

    advertisers and the NGO sector. Though it

    already broadcasts a considerable amount

    of health-related programmes, it is willing

    to sell airtime to NGOs who provide

    tailored programmes on various health

    issues that are produced in the commercial

    sector. Increasingly, Radio Nepal is working

    with the NGO and commercial sectors as a

    means of increasing broadcast quality and

    gaining specialist inputs on development

    and health-related topics. One such

    collaboration is between the NGO The

    Centre for Development Communication

    and the media producer Communication

    Corner, who produce the broad-based

    development programme Radio

    Haka-Haki (Radio Face to Face) for Radio

    Nepal. Radio Haka-Haki is a magazine-

    style programme broadcast on Radio

    Nepal three times per week within the

    8.30 p.m. prime-time slot. Haka-Haki

    covers four issues in each broadcast and

    addresses a wide range of development

    themes such as water rights, hygiene,

    bonded labour, street children, and

    violence against women and so on. The

    programme is popular throughout Nepal

    and though no concrete evaluation has

    been undertaken, Haka-Haki has inspired

    143 radio listening clubs to form and

    receives over 1,300 letters each month

    from listeners. The radio listening clubs are

    an interesting point of community

    organisation and there is evidence that

    these clubs are taking the information

    contained within the broadcasts to

    produce wall newspapers for their villages.

    Each broadcast contains at least one field-

    based report, which further increases its

    attractiveness to audiences.

    (Centre for Development 2000)

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 23

  • It is easy to dismiss internationalbroadcasting as politically driven,overtly propagandist, foreignpolicy driven or of little practicaluse to Southern national capacitybuilding efforts within the mediasector. However, internationalbroadcasters are starting toengage in capacity building andskills transference work withnational public broadcastingcounterparts. The BBC WorldService Trust (BBC WST) and BBCAfghan Education Projects (BBCAEP) represent two extremelypositive examples of the way inwhich skills and capacity can bebuilt in the South for healthbroadcasting. The BBC WST, acharitable trust run within theBBC World Service, specialises indeveloping the broadcast skills ofdeveloping world counterpartsand is actively engaged in anumber of cutting edge multi-media health promotioncampaigns in contexts such asIndia, Nepal and Cambodia.

    Likewise, the BBC AEP has takenthe issue of production and skillsdevelopment directly to the areain which it works, namely Pakistanand Afghanistan. Drawing on thetalent of local broadcasters, thelocally sited production unit is costeffective, works in partnershipwith local NGOs and engagesmore effectively with localaudiences through systematicresearch and evaluation work.

    Such capacity building projects,where they link to localbroadcasters and partner with thelocal community of civil societyorganisations and internationalNGOs can result in significant

    Compare this with Afghanistanand a very different pictureemerges. With the completebreakdown of national mediainfrastructure during the 1990s,the BBC World Service emerged asthe dominant broadcaster in thePersian and Pashtu languages, andhad, through various health-related broadcast formats asignificant impact on health, riskavoidance and health seekingbehaviour (Skuse 2002a).

    International broadcasting,especially when working with localcounterparts, can often play avanguard role in addressingsensitive issues such as HIV or birthcontrol, especially where localtaboos and conservative orunhelpful broadcastingconventions constrain the publicinformation environment. Forexample, Health Unlimitedsproject Urunana has built thecapacity of a local productionteam to make internationalstandard local language radio soapoperas in Rwanda. The productionfocuses on sexual reproductivehealth, is broadcast on the BBCWorld Services Great Lakes LifelineService (GLLS) and studiesidentified it as one of the mostpopular edutainment programmesin Rwanda. This is despite its verysensitive content and the directapproach that is uses to raiseissues affecting youth and women.

    Internationalbroadcasting

    Like public radio, internationalhealth broadcasting plays an oftencritical role in reaching rural andremote populations, as well aspopulations experiencing someform of social dislocation.International broadcasters such asthe BBC World Service, Voice ofAmerica or Radio Netherlandshave a long history of involve-ment in health broadcastingtargeting developing countries.Outputs such as the BBCs multi-language Sexwise series examine arange of sexual health issues indetail, whilst an array of otherEnglish and non-English languageprogrammes and programmematerial similarly address healthissues from within formats asvaried as news and soap opera.

    Continuing with the example ofthe BBC World Service, each oftheir language services, such asHindi, Swahili, Mandarin orPersian broadcasts health-relatedcontent that is generally of highquality, in both technical andinformational terms, but which isbroadcast in substantiallydifferent media environments.Taking China as an example,television represents the dominantmedium and the Chinese mediaenvironment is also extremelydense, therefore internationalhealth broadcasting such as thatbroadcast by the BBC may notachieve a significant audience andis therefore unlikely to have thedesired impact on poor peopleshealth in China.

    24

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    4.10

    4.11

    4.12

    4.13

    4.14

    4.8

    4.9

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 24

  • production capacity being builtwithin a number of differentradio sectors (community, public,commercial). A potentialexception to such an approachresides with international radio-based health interventions thattarget countries experiencingconflict or humanitarian crisis.Here, health broadcastingproduced by the likes of the BBCWorld Service or VOA can play animportant role in maintaining afocus on health, livelihoods andrights when national andcommunity broadcasting hascollapsed or is used for negativepurposes to fuel conflict andethnic animosity.4

    For example, large concentrationsof people combined with chronicmalnutrition tend to lead tosignificant increases in diseasevectors and a correspondingincrease in morality rates. Giventhis, radio is being used widely toaddress public health issues inareas undergoing conflict or crisisfor populations who remain intheir villages and towns or whoare displaced and are forced intorefugee or feeding camps.

    Conflict and non-conflictemergencies can overwhelmexisting health services, they canlead to the rapid breakdown ofsuch services and in areasexperiencing chronic emergencieshealth services and governmentstructures may be entirely absent.This places a critical emphasisupon radio as a means of reachingpopulations who are beyond theremit of routine aid deliverymechanisms, due either to theintensity of the conflict, the

    exacerbation of conflict withfamine or as a result ofgeographical remoteness.

    During conflict and crisis radio can:

    provide a humanitarian andinformation lifeline;

    address issues of basic diseaseprevention, hygiene and sanitation;

    address more complex medical issuesin areas where high mortality ratesexist, such as mother and child health(MCH), TB, Cholera, etc.

    provide a means of raising awarenessof harmful or hazardous materials,land mines and unexplodedordinance;

    provide information concerning theharmful effects of certain lay-treatments, the risks ofmisprescription and polypharmacy(the harmful combination of drugs totreat the same illness);

    provide a means of working throughissues relating to mental health ortrauma;

    provide a means for addressinglivelihood concerns, incomegeneration and the maximisation ofnutritional status.

    BOX 11

    Radio in Afghanistan: a humanitarian lifeline

    In Afghanistan, the aforementioned BBC

    AEP New Home, New Life radio soap

    opera has provided an information

    lifeline for millions of Afghans cut off

    from aid during the 1990s. Issues such as

    neo-natal tetanus and safer birthing are

    mixed with more prosaic concerns such

    as basic hygiene and sanitation. Within

    this context, diarrhoea is a major driver

    of under-5 mortality and oral

    rehydration salts (ORS) are routinely

    promoted within the drama as a simple

    and effective way of maintaining fluids

    in young children. Similarly, a focus on

    major trauma injuries resulting from

    land mine explosions is evident in

    storylines that seek to raise awareness of

    heavily mined areas and reduce risk-

    taking, especially by young people.

    (Skuse 1999)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    25

    4.15

    4.16

    4.17

    Footnotes

    See DFID (2000b), Working with Media

    in Conflicts and Other Emergencies for

    a more detailed examination of the

    role of radio broadcasting in

    humanitarian interventions.

    4

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 25

  • Th

    an

    ks

    toth

    era

    dio

    ,w

    ev

    efo

    un

    do

    ut

    tha

    tth

    ere

    are

    ma

    ny

    thin

    gs

    tha

    tca

    nch

    ang

    ean

    dth

    atwe

    canma

    kethe

    m change ourselves by relying on

    our own

    abilities

    equipment that allows clubs todocument their attempts to engagelocal government and serviceproviders to assist in areas as diverseas crop irrigation, bridge buildingand the establishment of village-based orphanages for childrenwhose parents have been lost toAIDS (DFID 2000). The materialdeveloped by the listening clubs isbroadcast in a thirty-minuteprogramme that highlights theclubs experiences with serviceproviders and which provides broadinformation and features on a rangeof development issues.

    The use of radio listening clubs inCentral and Southern Africa is at theforefront of the concept ofDevelopment Through Radio (DTR),which is promoted by, amongstothers, Panos Southern Africa, theMBC and the Federation of AfricanMedia Women. DTR uses radio as atool of empowerment, as a meansfor the identification of needs andthe claiming of rights and services.Once empowered with information,club participants engage in a processthat is more akin to peer education,using their knowledge toproblematise relevant local concernsover issues such as HIV/AIDS andchild spacing.

    Working in Zambia with the ZambiaNational Broadcasting Corporation,a Panos Southern Africa evaluationof the clubs highlighted how radiobecomes a more intimate andpotentially powerful medium whenlistening groups are organised. Aclub member from Mununga,Zambia, reveals that:

    When the health workers weregoing round the villages trying toeducate people, a lot of people

    The ability of radio at all levels tomobilise communities towards socialaction is of concern to both fundersand radio producers. The simplebroadcast of specific health-relatedmaterial without correspondingefforts to ensure that it articulateswith risk groups or the mostvulnerable has been recognised aspotentially inadequate. In thisregard participatory mechanismssuch as radio listening clubs aimedat empowering the most marginalmembers of society become apriority. As the UNDP note:

    pro-poor priorities such asbasic health and education receivelittle political attention. The moreunequal a society, the less likely it isto generate sustained politicalsupport for the Goals, becausepolitical power is usuallyconcentrated and overlaps witheconomic wealth and socialdominance. (2003: 133)

    Increasingly, radio projects arepiloting the concept of the listeningclub to ensure that communityaudiences access information, discussit and if appropriate, try to takeaction based on such discussion.From the perspective of theMillennium Development Goals andTargets we can think of how suchmechanisms could usefully buildconstituencies that advocate fortheir achievement.

    The Malawi-based Ndizathuzomwe(Its all ours, so lets protect it)project has used radio listening clubsas a mechanism through whichcommunities can secure rights andaccess to local services. Workingwith the MBC, Radio forDevelopment (RfD) and a host ofvillage-based radio listening clubs,the project provides basic recording

    26

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    55.1

    5.2

    5.3

    5.4

    Radio for social mobilisation

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 26

  • ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    27

    requires further examination. Ifradio listening clubs are to bescaled up significantly on anational basis and supportstructures strengthened, then suchevaluation represents a priorityconcern for donors.

    Despite such concerns, encouragingthe development of radio listeningclubs through support to CSOs andCBOs deemed representative of poormen, women and children may be auseful and cost effective mechanismfor community-based socialmobilisation around key health issues.

    Equally, mobilising listening clubs andproviding radios that can be located inpublic places such as schools, clinics,shops, local government offices, etc.,may lead to greater ICT access for poorpeople (providing the technology isused appropriately and not capturedby elites). By association, this may leadto increased levels of publicinformation and increased levels ofcommunity dialogue concerningrelevant health issues.

    The cost of providing equipment tolistening clubs is low. Radio setstypically cost between $5-10 andmaintenance is cheap and widelyavailable. The only significant recurrentexpense associated with radio is thatof batteries, though to an extent, thiscost can be offset by the use of solarpowered radio and clockwork radiosets, though clockwork radios remaininitially expensive ($50+). A cheapalternative is solar conversion kits,which, at around $3.00 per conversionalso represent a potential avenue forsmall business development.

    5.7

    5.8

    5.9

    BOX 12

    Lessons from a Little KnownExperience: Radio Candip, Zaire (DRC)

    Operating with the belief that listeners

    identify with localised examples given by

    their peers in their own language Zaires

    Radio Candip broadcasts in seven

    languages and gets local people

    involved through innovative radio

    listening clubs. A radio club is a group of

    people who come together to listen to

    the radio, to discuss the issues raised on

    the programme and to respond actively

    by providing feedback to the station

    and using the information they have

    received to implement community

    projects. Radio listening clubs found to

    be operating successfully are given a

    cassette recorder with which to record

    voice pieces in a range of formats, for

    broadcast on the radio. Although the

    success of some radio listening clubs has

    been limited due to the indirect nature

    of their access to the studio, and due to

    the undertaking of unrealistic

    community projects, on the whole the

    station has been successful in

    transforming passive listening into

    dialogue and communication. As one

    elderly man has said: we used to think

    that we lived in an unchangeable

    situation. Thanks to the radio, weve

    found out that there are many things

    that can change and that we can make

    them change ourselves by relying on our

    own abilities.

    (Aw,W 1992a)

    were not interested, they didntthink it was important, but when itstarted coming from their fellowwomen, from the clubs, a lot ofpeople have got interested.(http://www.comminit.com)

    Panos Southern Africa work to fourspecific objectives whenapproaching DTR, chiefly:

    enable clubs to develop their owncommunities;empower women;raise the voice of rural women innational debates concerningdevelopment;stimulate debate.

    Working principally with nationalpublic service broadcasters, DTR-oriented projects have beensuccessful in achieving suchobjectives. Their ability to get theoften dissenting and critical voicesof the rural poor on national radiowhere service providers such as localclinics and hospitals can be held upto local scrutiny represents animportant accountability mechanismcontributing to better governance.

    A number of issues of concern canbe identified with regard to radiolistening clubs. Though meant tobe participatory, clubs that areestablished with very broad aims,as opposed to those that are morediscreet in composition, i.e. poorrural women or children, can becaptured by village-based self-interest groups and used to theirown advantage, thusperpetuating inequality andmarginalisation. Further, evidenceof the example clubs set for othercommunities wishing to emulatetheir role remains unclear and

    5.5

    5.6

    27

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 27

  • For health broadcasting to havean appropriate impact - and ICDinitiatives more broadly - it isessential that the informationcontained within the wide varietyof formats and approachesavailable to producers is bothaccurate and useable. Assessmentof the information needs, existingknowledge, risk taking and healthseeking behaviour of targetaudiences also represents a criticalpriority and essential element ofhealth communicationsintervention planning and design.

    The quality and accuracy of healthinformation accessed by radio staffduring production impacts directlyupon health broadcast outputs.This is illustrated above withregard to detrimental rumourssurrounding health issues, whichradio can both knowingly andinadvertently exacerbate. Rumoursconcerning the perceiveddetrimental health effects ofcertain medical procedures,treatments, vaccinations and so on,are as commonplace as therumours, stigma and discriminationthat are socially constructed aboutdiseases and the people that areboth known or suspected of having

    them. For example, Lupton(1994: 16-18) reveals that in the

    late 1980s in the West, mediacoverage of HIV/AIDS focusedalmost exclusively onhomosexual men and female

    sex workers as vectors of HIV.This focus on so-called

    dangerous social categories(despite epidemiological evidenceto the contrary) was at the expenseof at risk people engaging in

    unprotected heterosexual sex.

    6.1

    6.2

    BOX 13

    Combating anti-vaccination rumours:lessons learnt from East Africa

    A study recently undertaken in East Africa

    examined the extent to which anti-

    vaccination rumours concerning potential

    side effects affected levels of vaccination

    coverage, and the impact of strategies to

    combat the rumours. For example, in

    Uganda, Greater Afrikan Radio was one of

    several radio broadcasters that have been

    attributed to causing a decline in polio

    immunisation of children. The study found

    that it was a lack of good health

    information within the radio stations

    themselves that resulted in rumours being

    broadcast and that rumours needed to be

    countered through all available channels,

    including radio, film vans, television and

    newspapers. However, it is important to

    first assess whether or not the rumours

    have in fact impacted on behaviour, before

    overreacting and risking raising the profile

    of the rumours and rumourmongers

    further. It may also be useful to make

    available a place to register rumours, such

    as a toll-free rumour hotline, or a rumour

    call-in radio programme.

    (UNICEF 2002)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    Building links for betterhealth broadcasting6

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 28

  • Much of the developing world,Africa in particular, is stereotypedas overly promiscuous withinwestern national andinternational media (Lupton 1994:18). However, such mediacoverage tends to ignore: (i) thesocio-economic dimensions of thedisease; (ii) the inability of manypoor people to have STIs treated,due to lack of health services ortheir cost; (iii) the relatively lowlevels of public informationavailable to the poor; and (iv) thebroad range of contextual driversof the disease, such as thedisempowering and endemiclevels of violence against womenthat occurs in Southern Africa orthe significant volume ofeconomic migration that occurs inthe region (UNIFEM 2000).

    Importantly, radio can help tocounter negative and harmfulstereotypes and promote positivecommunity dialogue concerninghealth. However, with respect toHIV/AIDS many countries still havea long way to go in coming toterms with its social, economicand political implications. InChina, for example, denial of thescale of the HIV/AIDS problem hasresulted in a weak nationalresponse and paucity of targetedhealth promotion activities. Insuch contexts the public radioresponse tends to be moralistic,didactic and over-technical,leading to concerns regarding theusefulness of such broadcastingfor the poor (Skuse, Slavin and Adam 2002).

    The example cited above indicatesthe need to work closely with riskgroups and the need to enhancehealth information flows to keyinformation providers such asradio stations. It also highlightsthe need for simple, but sound,formative research amongst thetarget audience prior tobroadcasting. Adam and Harford(1999), with reference to HIV/AIDSbroadcasting, suggest thatbroadcasting should primarilyrespond to the critical healthinformation needs of the poor.They identify a number of areasrelevant to the strengthening ofhealth broadcasting.

    Obtaining a flow of accurate,useful and useable health-relatedinformation and support material,combined with a community-ledapproach, remains thecornerstones of better healthbroadcasting and here,governments have a clear role toplay. Rather than seeing the non-state radio sector as a critic andcompetitor there is clear scope towork in partnership with theexpanding community andcommercial sectors for the benefitof public health. Increasingly,project partnerships are drawingbroadcasters into close cooperationwith NGOs in particular.

    BOX 14

    Countering negative stereotypes -Sathi Sanga Maka Kura (Chattingwith My Best Friend) Radio Nepal

    Chatting with My Best Friend is a

    magazine format radio programme,

    broadcast nationally, that is focused on

    youth and seeks to inspire interaction

    and communication regarding HIV/AIDS.

    UNICEF and FHI Nepal identified young

    people under the age of 15 as being at

    especially high risk from HIV and

    therefore sought to support a lively and

    entertaining programme that would

    capture the attention of young radio

    listeners. Young people were involved

    throughout the design and

    implementation of the project, from

    research phase to production. The aim

    of the programme is to enhance life

    skills, reduce stigma and strengthen

    prevention. In Nepal self and social-

    stigma regarding HIV/AIDS is widespread

    and the programme, which designs

    discussion points and stories drawn from

    real life scenarios, aims to bring

    HIV/AIDS in to the public arena for

    discussion, and to openly address issues

    relating to sex, peer pressure, stigma,

    relationships and discrimination. The

    hour-long programme features drama,

    music and chat and a listeners letters

    slot. Up to 500 listeners letters are

    received each week. The programmes

    stance is non-judgemental, supportive

    and positive.

    (http://www.unicef.org)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    29

    6.3

    6.4

    6.5

    6.6

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 29

  • For increased donor support to flowto the radio sector it is importantthat strong linkages and cleardevelopmental outcomes areidentified for poor communitiesthat flow from their engagementwith radio, i.e. increases in thelevels of public informationavailable or increases in theaccuracy of information shared insocial communication. Whilst theargument that community radio inits own right is critical to comm-unity empower-ment and voice isvalid (Aw 1992b; David 1992),strategic attention needs to be paidto linkages with health informationproviders, with governmentministries and with local informa-tion providers, such as health clinicsand NGOs. This will serve toincrease the flow of accurate healthinformation to radio producers,which ultimately is of benefit tolisteners. Ministries of informationalso have a vital role to play inhelping build media environ-mentsconducive to better health, throughthe inclusion of public servicecommitments for commercialstation in licence agreements.

    Community radio stations representa key local channel for healthinformation and their localpopularity and potential has notescaped the notice of donors andNGOs seeking to strengthen thesector. Increasingly, health content isbeing syndicated to nationalnetworks of community stationsthrough a number of means, prin-cipally on CD, tape or via theInternet. Also, Internet has beentrailed, albeit with partial success, torespond to listeners informationrequests through a format calledradio browsing.

    30

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    6.7

    6.8

    BOX 16

    BBC World Services New Home, NewLife radio soap opera: ensuringquality health messages forAfghanistan through agency co-ordination and partnership

    The BBCs soap opera for Afghanistan,

    New Home, New Life, relies upon a

    broad network of funders and specialist

    NGOs to provide technical input in to its

    script development process. The projects

    funders are numerous (including FAO,

    DFID, ICRC UNICEF, UNESCO, UNHCR,

    UNOCHA, UNOPS, WHO) and all bring

    with them certain requirements, in

    terms of the broad social development

    themes, that they wish to raise through

    the soap opera. For example, UNICEF

    themes include clean births and safe

    motherhood, whilst WHO themes

    include the rational use of drugs and

    mother and child health (MCH). The

    production must choose from a list of

    around 25 themes, much health related,

    for incorporation in to the script. The

    necessary technical input occurs through

    a process that exposes funders and

    specialist contributors to script

    development ideas, through the

    circulation of a synopsis of forthcoming

    themes and dramatic content, and a

    follow up meeting called to discuss the

    technical content.

    (Skuse 1999)

    BOX 15

    Building information support forradio professionals

    Radio professionals need:

    information about health issues to

    ensure that the information being

    broadcast is accurate, relevant and up-

    to-date;

    information about the target

    audience; their knowledge,

    perceptions and risk taking and health

    seeking behaviour;

    information concerning radio

    listenership patterns, data on radio

    ownership and access, preferred

    programme formats, listening times

    and quality of reception;

    information about other organisations

    providing health education and

    services in the area.

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 30

  • Despite the problems associatedwith the use of new ICTs in theSouth, i.e. slow download times,the cost of computer technologyand the need for skills training,health information contentsyndication through e-mail andInternet, as well as throughroutine Internet web-surfing,represent key areas for capacitydevelopment within the sector.

    Increasingly, content is beingsyndicated to community radiostations through internationalInternet-based content (audio andtext) sites such as the OneWorldRadio HIV/AIDS resource andInterWorld Radio run by PanosUK, and through regional andnational sites such as AMARCsPulsar News Service in LatinAmerica. Pulsar has beenspecifically set up to serve thecommunity radio sector withaudio and text-based news relateditems. Within such sites, a keyfocus is on health and theprovision of detailed case studiesand national and regionalinformation regarding diseasessuch as HIV/AIDS, TB or Malaria.

    Important national healthinformation sites are alsobeginning to emerge. In SouthAfrica the online health newsservice called Health-e provides arange of health information andaudio features to a wide range oforganisations. The website allowsusers to download audio newsfeatures, for example, on livingwith HIV/AIDS and providesstatistical data and informationresources for journalists. Thewebsite allows users to freelyaccess the service and represents a

    potentially important informationchannel for the community radiosector, although the use of suchservices remains relatively under-examined. There is also thepotential problem of thesegeneric features lacking culturalspecificity, which may lessen theirimpact in terms of behaviourchange within discretecommunities and risk groups.

    Enhancing useful and useableinformation flows and supportinglinks to radio stations represents apriority for donor support, as doesbroader skills and capacitybuilding support for thecommunity and public sectors inparticular. However, it is importantto stress the general principle thatstand alone interventions forhealth, be they radio-based orotherwise, tend to be lesseffective than multi-method orchannel approaches. In part, thisreflects the recognition thatbehaviour change is a process thatis reliant upon multiple factorsand influences (i.e. gender,availability of commodities such ascondoms, access to credible publicinformation and so on) ratherthan health communications oreducation components alone.

    BOX 17

    Radio and new technology: KothmaleCommunity Radio, Sri Lanka

    A recent study by Slater, Tacchi and

    Lewis (2002) of the Kothmale

    Community Radio Internet Project in Sri

    Lanka (see also KCRIP) found that poor

    people valued information highly,

    especially that relating to livelihoods

    and health. Despite near universal radio

    ownership, local information resources

    were found to be poor and national

    media was generally not perceived as

    trustworthy due to its politicised nature.

    Because of this, local people tended to

    prioritise local media and local concerns.

    The Kothmale project began as an

    experiment that sought to combine the

    Internet with community radio in

    innovative ways. Initially, the mechanism

    of radio browsing where the

    broadcaster would search for answers to

    listeners questions delivered by phone,

    post or in person in real broadcast time

    was employed. However, the study

    found that radio-browsing programmes

    were not especially popular and that

    using the Internet in this way was

    cumbersome and inefficient.

    Subsequently, it has been integrated

    into day to day broadcasting in more

    mundane ways, with Internet being used

    as a mainstream resource, with the

    information derived from it being

    incorporated into broadcast content

    without listeners being explicitly aware

    of it. The Internet component of such

    broadcasts has since been replaced by

    station staff referring to an electronic

    encyclopaedia on CD-ROM in order to

    answer listeners questions.

    (Slater, Tacchi and Lewis 2002: 24)

    ICD RADIO BROADCASTING FOR HEALTH: AN ISSUES PAPER

    31

    6.9

    6.10

    6.11

    6.12

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 31

  • Zimbabwe.

    Villagers gathered around listening to the

    radio outside a hut adorned with an

    AIDS emblem.

    Chris Sattlberger / Panos Pictures

    26656 Radio Brochure proof 25/8/04 5:09 pm Page 32

  • Though single mediainterventions and single formatsoccasionally have a significantimpact on health their success isoften driven by context specificfactors, such as conflict, povertyor the simplicity of the mediaenvironment, rather than theformat itself (cf. Skuse 2002a).Despite the fact that radio is arelatively cheap medium to bothestablish and broadcast, it is nowwidely recognised that exposureto multiple messages with theinvolvement of the ministries,serves to reinforce the overallimpact of health campaigning.Single radio-based interventionsthat are not linked to othercommunication (i.e. TV, video,theatre) and education efforts(i.e. peer, life skills), services (i.e.counselling, vaccination) orcommodity provisi