Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Mass Media Interventions for Child Survival in Low and Middle Income Countries

Through a systematic review of the literature, this article summarizes and evaluates evidence for the effectiveness of mass media interventions for child survival. To be included, studies had to describe a mass media intervention; address a child survival health topic; present quantitative data from a low- or middle-income country; use an evaluation design that compared outcomes using pre- and postintervention data, treatment versus comparison groups, or postintervention data across levels of exposure; and report a behavioral or health outcome. The 111 campaign evaluations that met the inclusion criteria included 15 diarrheal disease, 8 immunization, 2 malaria, 14 nutrition, 1 preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV, 4 respiratory disease, and 67 reproductive health interventions. These evaluations were then sorted into weak (n ¼ 33), moderate (n¼32), and stronger evaluations (n¼46) on the basis of the sampling method, the evaluation design, and efforts to address threats to inference of mass media effects. The moderate and stronger evaluations provide evidence that mass media-centric campaigns can positively impact a wide range of child survival health behaviors.

Author

Danielle A. Naugle, Robert C. Hornik

Contributor

Journal of Health Communication: International Perspectives

Published
September 2014
Resource Types
BCC for Diarrhea and Pneumonia
Health Area
Child Health
Keywords
diarrhea
Current Downloads
12

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