The impact of a family planning multimedia campaign in Bamako, Mali |
Author(s):
, , ,Journal/Book: Stud Fam Plann. 1998; 29: 309-23.
Abstract: An integrated multimedia campaign featuring family planning messages saturated the 900,000-person city of Bamako, Mali, for three months during the spring of 1993. With traditional theater and music, family planning messages were repeatedly broadcast on radio and television that conveyed information about modern contraceptive methods, the need for male sexual responsibility, the health and economic advantages of family planning, the need for communication between spouses, and that Islam, the predominant faith of Mali, does not oppose family planning. A separate sample pretest-post-test quasi-experimental research design was used to evaluate the effects of the campaign and exposure to specific messages on changes in contraceptive knowledge, attitudes, and practice. Results indicate a high level of exposure to and agreement with the messages. A dramatic drop was found in the proportion of men and women who believe that Islam opposes family planning. Logistic regression results indicate that contraceptive knowledge and use and more favorable attitudes toward family planning are positively associated with intensity of exposure to the project interventions, after controlling for relevant variables.
Keyword(s): Adolescence. Adult. Birth Rate. Contraception/utilization. Developing Countries. Family Planning/utilization. Female. Health Education. Human. Infant, Newborn. Islam. Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice. Male. Mali. Mass Media. Middle Age. Pregnancy. Religion and Sex. Support, Non-U.S. Gov't. Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
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