The Communication Initiative Network

Where communication and media are central to social and economic development

GLOBAL| Approaches| Tools| Issues| Regions/Countries| MDGs| Polls / Discussions

E-magazines

Upcoming Events


Average Rating: no ratings submitted

Last Child: The Global Race to End Polio

Country

Angola, Haiti, India, Nigeria, Somalia

Region

Global, Africa, Caribbean, South Asia

Programme Summary

The Last Child: The Global Race to End Polio is a one-hour documentary film that offers a series of glimpses into the triumphs and challenges surrounding the campaign to eradicate polio worldwide. Produced and directed by an independent filmmaker who works with Atlanta-based CARE USA, the film debuted in June 2004 in New Delhi, India and has been screened on American public television and at film festivals in select cities around the world.

Communication Strategies

This project uses the medium of film in an effort to personalise the crippling disease and create empathy both for those who are fearful of vaccinating their children against it and for those who work to overcome those misunderstandings. In short, the visual medium is used to share experiences, to the end of disbanding the myth that polio is a disease of the past, communicate the impact that polio has on individual lives, and generate motivation among individuals and communities to participate in the effort to eradicate it.

Filmmaker Scott Thigpen visited 8 countries on 4 continents to make The Last Child, which was planned as a celebration of the imminent eradication of polio but became a testament to the obstacles impeding the campaign against the disease. The crew collected nearly 200 hours of video footage, including 90 interviews with epidemiologists, doctors, government officials, vaccinators, humanitarian workers, community volunteers, religious leaders, and polio survivors, and their families. Highlights of the one-hour film include:

  • Overcoming community fear and suspicion during immunisation campaigns in India
  • Containing an outbreak in Nigeria by searching for nomadic tribes that have been repeatedly missed by vaccinators
  • Navigating war-torn Angola and Somalia to reach every child for immunisation
  • Combating a vaccine-related outbreak in Haiti.

The film project is accompanied by a website that is designed to inform and mobilise viewers, educators, and media personnel, hopefully generating discussion and motivating action. For example, a learning section includes links to further articles about polio in the popular press, a frequently asked questions area, a polio facts section, a timeline (the history of polio from 1580 B.C. to the present), maps and status reports, details about partners in the fight against polio, and a resources section. Furthermore, the Take Action section encourages citizens to host an event to raise awareness about eradication efforts (organisers will share ideas over email, provide a toolkit, and work to help provide a speaker for an event). Other tools offered here are an online letter to be used for urging legislative support for polio eradication, a sample "letter to the editor" that citizens may send to their local newspaper to make their community aware of the importance of eradication efforts, and various opportunities for unpaid or paid work with polio immunisation campaigns. An online donation is another of the Take Action steps. In addition, o help spread the word about the issues highlighted in the film, a press toolkit and teacher's guide are also available for download here.

Development Issues

Polio, Immunisation & Vaccines, Children, Health.

Key Points

Organisers indicate that the 15-year, US$3 billion effort to eradicate polio has accomplished a reduction in polio by 99% (from approximately 350,000 cases per year to fewer than 1,000). Twenty million volunteers worldwide have immunised over 2 billion children, they say. However, in the words of the film's director/producer, "As The Last Child shows, there are several obstacles to achieving the global eradication of polio, including war, virus mutations, poor sanitation, cultural misunderstandings and a critical shortage in funding. Fortunately, the eradication campaign has forged unprecedented public and private partnerships in public health."

Organisers expect that televised programme will potentially reach over 85 million USA households. In addition, The Last Child was scheduled to air on NHK Japan and to be screened at the Rome International Film Festival and the Asheville Film Festival.

Partners

CARE, Allied Vaughn, Elevation, Succinct Media Group, Turner Studios, New Media for Non Profits.

Contact

Scott Thigpen
Producer/Director
info@lastchild.org
Last Child website

To order a VHS or DVD copy, contact:
Bullfrog Films
Tel.: 1-800-543-3764
Click here

Broadcasters interested in airing this programme outside of the United States may contact:
CS Associates
Tel.: (617) 923-0077
Click here

CARE, Allied Vaughn, Elevation, Succinct Media Group, Turner Studios, New Media for Non Profits.

Source

Email (dated September 9 2004) from Scott Thigpen, forwarded to The Communication Initiative by Ellyn Ogden on September 22 2004; and "Polio: 'The only option is success' - New film chronicles battle to end polio" [PDF] by M.A.J. McKenna, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) July 7 2004, forwarded by Ellyn Ogden to The Communication Initiative on October 25 2004; and Last Child website; and email from Scott Thigpen to The Communication Initiative on November 29 2004.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site November 24 2004
Last Updated November 29 2004

How useful did you find this page to your work?

1 - not useful    5 - very useful

Feel free to leave us comments

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Help Seed The CI Network

Login / Register

Subscribe to The Drum Beat, Contribute to Forums, Get Poll Results etc
New to CI? » Start here

Development Classifieds

Impact of Obama?

What will the impact of an Obama United States Presidency be for more effective action on poverty and other international development priorities? [Please explain your reasons in the comments field.]