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Christian Polio Eradication PartnershipCountryAngola RegionAfrica Programme SummaryBeginning in 1998, UNICEF created alliances with Angola's Christian churches in a communication initiative to end polio, one household at a time. In response to the news that some of Angola's Catholic clergy, including bishops and archbishops, were preaching against polio vaccination (saying that the vaccine being used had been altered to cause sterilisation), UNICEF set out to stop the rumours as well as to recruit the churches as active allies in polio elimination. Through face-to-face meetings and interpersonal communication channels, a partnership was formed to help correct misunderstandings about polio vaccination and to encourage parents to immunise their children against the crippling disease. Communication StrategiesIn essence, UNICEF Angola's programme communication team sought to dispel growing misconceptions and rumours about vaccination, and to engage church organisations to participate in social mobilisation training and other activities. Because of the high level of illiteracy and poor media coverage in Angola, interpersonal communication channels were used to take messages to hard-to-reach areas and isolated populations. Partnership was the central means of mobilising Angola's religious community to participate and to use its voice for polio eradication. UNICEF began by recruiting a senior member of the Catholic Church who had previously worked for UNICEF as a social mobilisation consultant. Using his contacts, a series of meetings was held with bishops from the Episcopal Conference of Angola and Sao Tome and with members of the Executive Board of the Council of Christian Churches of Angola (Protestant sect). Through the meetings, participants gradually worked towards a common understanding that the rumours around sterilisation were unfounded and that the vaccines were safe. In addition, the goal of saving lives through vaccination was linked to the basic values of Christianity, including the curative dimension of Christ's life, his love for children, and the social responsibility of the modern church. Participants explored ways of working together to promote these key points among their practitioners. Having established these ties, the church's powerful voice and potent imagery was used as a communication strategy through the creation printed materials and the forging of interpersonal channels. As a first step towards dispelling rumours, a poster showing Mother Teresa administering the oral polio vaccine to a child in India and a pamphlet entitled 'What you do to these little ones, to Me you do' were developed and distributed in Catholic parishes throughout the country. Next, the church leaders were asked to nominate organisations within their respective churches that could work with the urgency that eradicating polio demanded. (UNICEF would provide the training, travel costs, and small fees for the coordination body.) The Catholic bishops first nominated the local branch of the Legion of Mary, which specialises in house visits for the sick and destitute, and later added the female branch of the Catholic Church called Promotion of the Catholic Women. The Council of Christian Churches of Angola nominated its Medical Council, an association of doctors and nurses from their congregations. Having reached this point, the following steps were taken:
Development IssuesImmunisation & Vaccines, Children, Health. Key PointsColonial religious restrictions had left Angola a predominantly Christian country (38% Roman Catholic, 15% Protestant, and 47% practising indigenous beliefs). Churches were considered to be important allies in that, as social structures, they extended from national to municipal and community levels. Furthermore, they could be mobilised rapidly enough to contribute to an emergency vaccination operation. By 1998, Angola had suffered almost continuous civil war for more than 2 decades. This war made it imperative to enlist the help of committed, reliable, social mobilisers who were respected by their communities and by authorities from both sides of the conflict. Despite the devastation that the conflict had caused to infrastructure and the economy, the country had managed to hold national immunisation days (NIDs) for the previous 3 years. Nonetheless, a polio epidemic erupted; 2 major cities, Benguela and Luanda, were affected and 1,103 cases and 60 deaths were recorded. As of March 2005, UNICEF has an ongoing agreement with Legion of Mary and a new one in discussion with Protestant churches. Furthermore, a new agenda has been signed to allow the activists' joint activities to continue. Under the agreement, each of the nominated religious organisations is pledging to engage 5 managers at the national level, 25 trainers at the provincial level, and 1,000 activists at the district and community levels in the partnership. The new recruits are expected to visit about 10,000 families (around 70,000 people) each month. PartnersUNICEF, Episcopal Conference of Angola and Sao Tome, Council of Christian Churches of Angola, Legion of Mary, Promotion of the Catholic Women. ContactPatricia Cervantes
Communication Officer, UNICEF Angola pcervantes@unicef.org Judith Graeff Programme Communication Officer, UNICEF Bangladesh jgraeff@unicef.org Placed on the Communication Initiative site November 29 2004 Last Updated December 21 2007 |
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