ClassifiedsMexico XVII - Communication |
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Changing Youth Behavior Through Social Marketing: Program Experiences and Research Findings From Cameroon, Madagascar, and RwandaPublication Date2003
SummaryPublished in 2003 by the Population Reference Bureau (PRB), this 20-page publication describes three social marketing programmes that used "a creative mix of mass media and interpersonal approaches to motivate young people to take action to protect themselves".
From the Summary Using the latest innovations in social marketing, Population Services International (PSI), a USA-based nonprofit group, created and implemented youth-oriented programs in Cameroon, Madagascar, and Rwanda to prevent unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, among 15-to-24-year-olds. Research played a critical role in developing the programmes' strategies and key messages. In addition to advertising products - a common feature of social marketing campaigns - the programmes used a creative mix of commercial marketing and interpersonal approaches to motivate young people to either use condoms consistently or not have sex, learn their HIV status, and seek treatment for other sexually transmitted infections. Working with the private sector, the programmes made condoms and other reproductive health products and services - otherwise off-limits to unmarried youth - more accessible and "youth friendly." The programmes combined several features that made them unique among adolescent reproductive health programmes:
An external evaluator described this programme as "an outstanding, well-conceived, managed, implemented and monitored sexual health intervention with significant opportunities to provide a learning laboratory for PSI's growing youth portfolio." The programmes contributed to measurable changes in youths' perceptions and behaviors.
The programmes achieved these results by making discussion about sex more common and acceptable, creating new social norms for safe behavior, and motivating youth to seek out and use reproductive health services. Still, some programme objectives remain to be achieved, such as increasing condom use among sexually active youth in Rwanda, increasing condom use among young women in Cameroon, and increasing young men's use of reproductive health services in Madagascar. All three programmes need to do more to motivate increasing numbers of youth to either abstain from sex or use condoms consistently (every time they have sex). A third round of surveys and additional analysis in 2003 will shed more light on changes in youth behavior in each country and the implications of these trends for future programmes. PublisherNumber of Pages20 ContactPopulation Reference Bureau (PRB)
1875 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 520 Washington, DC, 20009-5728 United States Tel: (800) 877-9881 Fax: 202-328-3937 popref@prb.org Website SourcePaper copy; PRB website. Placed on the Communication Initiative site October 11 2004 Last Updated February 19 2008 |
Login / RegisiterCulturally Effective StrategiesIf culturally delicate factors such as male circumcision or fewer multiple concurrent partners are to be effectively addressed, which communication strategies are most required? [choose a maximum of 3]
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