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Impact Data - CHL Avian Influenza Communication

Country

Egypt

Region

Africa

Date

May 2006

Context

According to the organisers of this communication campaign, poultry is a very important source of income for many families - especially rural families - in Egypt. Nearly one-third of the population own poultry in this country. Pre-testing of preliminary avian influenza (AI) communication materials showed that rural groups as well as the general public wanted more information on signs of bird flu in poultry and its means of control.

In this context, the Communication for Healthy Living (CHL) Project designed an integrated package of communication interventions in Egypt under the rubric of its "Your Health is Your Wealth" initiative. The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health/Center for Communication Programs (CCP) implemented this communication strategy through the Health Communication Partnership (HCP), as part of a United States Agency for International Development (USAID)-supported partnership between the Ministry of Health and Population (MOHP) and the Ministry of Information/State Information Services (MOI-SIS).

Under the auspices of the national AI committee, a multi-tiered bird flu preparedness effort was developed, which featured the following: television, radio, and press announcements; Government of Egypt (GOE) website support; hotline promotion, press inserts, press briefings, and journalist training; provider fact-sheets; community mobilisation in partnership with non-governmental organisations (NGOs); and consumer fliers, posters, and other printed information materials, which were provided through health facilities and a national network of pharmacies.

Methodologies

CHL had already scheduled a national survey (the Egypt Health Communication Survey, or EHCS) for May 2006 to assess the reach and impact of its family health communication activities. The programme augmented the survey to assess the reach of the AI campaign and its impact on knowledge of transmission and symptoms, and initiation of protective practices. The survey used a nationally representative sample (n=4052) of 15- to 49-year-old adults in 21 governorates.

Access

Eighty-six percent of the adult population - an estimated 38 million people - were able to recall messages from the campaign.

The national AI hotline received close to 300,000 calls in the first 3 months of the campaign.

Knowledge Shifts

Eighty to ninety percent of respondents reported that they had learned something from the campaign. Specifically, 84% reported having learned about modes of transmission, 90% said they learned about symptoms in humans, and 88% knew more about symptoms in birds of avian flu.

Practices

On the whole, 78% percent of those who could recall a campaign message, compared to 55% who could not, reported taking at least one protective action. Specifically, these actions included:

  • Avoiding contact with birds - 52% of those who heard 2 or more campaign messages said they did so, as compared to 42% of those who had not heard any campaign messages.
  • Keeping children and the elderly away from poultry - this was the case for 39% of those who had heard 2 campaign messages, as opposed to 29% of those who had heard none.
  • Washing their hands (35% vs. 16%) and utensils (30% vs. 14%) more carefully after preparing poultry.

Contact

Basil Safi
Basil Safi
Program Officer
bsafi@jhuccp.org
OR
Doug Storey
Associate Director for Communication Science and Research
dstorey@jhuccp.org

Health Communication Partnership
based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health/Center for Communication Programs
111 Market Place, Suite 310
Baltimore, MD 21202
United States
Tel: 1 410 659 6300
Fax: 1 410 6596266
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health/Center for Communication Programs website
Click here to access the full evaluation document in PDF format. To request a paper copy of this evaluation, please email orders@jhuccp.org or click here.

Placed on the Communication Initiative site August 16 2007
Last Updated October 15 2007

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