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Communication Support for the Pakistan Polio Eradication InitiativePresented at: The Technical Advisory Group (TAG) Meeting on Communication for Polio Eradication Publication DateJune 22-24 2005 SummaryThis PowerPoint presentation was part of a June 2005 joint United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)/World Health Organisation (WHO) meeting dedicated to examining communication in the context of the final global push to eradicate polio. At this meeting, country-specific presentations were made by communication practitioners in 16 of the 21 countries which have experienced cases of wild poliovirus in 2004 and/or in 2005 (to June). The total number of global poliovirus cases increased from 784 cases in 2003 to 1,255 cases in 2004, with 1,004 cases reported to August 9 2005 (548 for the same period in 2005). Communication strategies presented at this meeting were primarily focused on:
According to this presentation, Pakistan (one of 6 polio endemic countries), has experienced a consistent decrease in the number of poliovirus cases since 2003 as follows: 103 cases (2003), 53 cases (2004), and 10 cases to June 2005 vs 16 cases for the same period in 2004 (a 40% decrease). The communication strategy is two-fold, and is designed to:
Mass media in Pakistan is utilised extensively to ensure wide coverage, with celebrity polio ambassadors including entertainers, sports figures, religious figures and political leaders making both personal and media appearances. Television has been reported as the most trusted source of information among all the mass media, and reaches over 89% of the population. Messages are data driven. For example, one focal message designed to increase the proportion of caregivers understanding that oral polio vaccine (OPV) is safe for a child with fever or diarrhoea resulted in an increase of from 70% to 80% of those surveyed (from Dec 2004 to May 2005). Polio programme communication has been gain-framed, using positive messages and vivid materials with a recognised "two-drop" logo and tag line, which have a reported 86% unprompted recognition. Materials are available in local language print and electronic media, with regionally appropriate images. The logo has also been incorporated into the Expanded Programme of Immunisation (EPI) messages. In summary, this presentation indicates that there have been improvements in all aspects of both the campaign and surveillance over the past two years, as well as a steady decrease in virus transmission. A key remaining challenge is the acknowledged immunity gap in children under one year of age. All activities are directed towards increasing coverage in this group, including recognition that mothers are an important missing link in accessing these children. ContactPlaced on the Communication Initiative site September 07 2005 Last Updated October 26 2007 |
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