1 / 25

Communication for HIV/AIDS: Challenges and opportunities

Communication for HIV/AIDS: Challenges and opportunities. By Kindyomunda Rosemary M, Uganda AIDS Commission 4 th Partnership Forum, 31 Jan 06. Presentation outline. Background – Communication contexts Epidemiological, Programmatic Why communicate? About what? Communication approaches

Download Presentation

Communication for HIV/AIDS: Challenges and opportunities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Communication for HIV/AIDS: Challenges and opportunities By Kindyomunda Rosemary M, Uganda AIDS Commission 4th Partnership Forum, 31 Jan 06

  2. Presentation outline • Background – Communication contexts • Epidemiological, Programmatic • Why communicate? About what? • Communication approaches • Communication and knowledge management • Communication challenges • Opportunities for expansion • Proposals for way forward

  3. Communication context:Epidemiological • Routes of transmission • Heterosexual contact >80%, Mother to child about 25%, blood borne <2% • Mature generalized epidemic • No longer driven by risk populations alone • Over 800,000 HIV+ - need care • Majority HIV free – but at risk, vulnerable and affected

  4. Communication context:Epidemiological • Variations in HIV prevalence • Geographical, demographic • Differences in drivers of epidemic or causes of vulnerability • Un answered questions e.g. • The shift - when do adults get infected? • What happens to those infected through MTCT

  5. Communication context:Programmatic • Multisectoral approach • Not a domain of a single sector • Approaches from different angles, levels • Health, social, economic, political • Ideological influences • Religious, cultural, etc • Differences in messaging and channeling • Social, economic status of audience • Determines the approaches

  6. Why Communicate? • To influence behaviours • Prevent contracting/transmitting HIV • Enhance health care seeking behaviours • Enhance service uptake • Prevention, care and support • Health, social, spiritual etc • Lobby for scaled HIV/AIDS actions • Policy, programming, resources • Equity and quality service delivery

  7. Communication to influence behaviours • Adopting safe Sexual behaviour • Abstaining – primary, secondary • Being faithful to one partner - knowledge of sero-status • Correct consistent condom use – casual partner, already infected • Preventing mother to child transmission (MTCT) • Awareness about MTCT, opportunities for preventing it • Preventing blood borne transmission • Awareness about routes, PEP, blood donation • Counter Myths, misconceptions, misinformation

  8. Communicate about what? • Enhance health care seeking behaviours and service uptake (prevention & care) • Benefits of the various services – key promise • Availability of the services • Stigma and discrimination Communication for reduction of risk, vulnerability and impact mitigation

  9. Communication approaches • IEC – Information, Education and Communication • Mass media: print, electronic, sermons, drama • BCC – Behaviour Change Communication (individual) • One to one, life skills dev’t, etc • Communication for individual and social change • Focus on the individual and environments • Policies, laws, socio-economic aspects, social norms, services, support systems etc

  10. Communication and Information seeking behaviour theories • Information only sought/used when the individual registers a need • Risk perception • Info relevancy, applicability, timeliness • Information/exposure/experience act as triggers for an information need • Individual follows-up to satisfy need • Challenges of accessibility to timely, accurate info • Trigger can be +ve or -ve

  11. Communication and Information seeking behaviour theories • Individual’s knowledge used to seek, evaluate source & info, process and utilize info • What builds individual knowledge • Indigenous knowledge: values, norms, beliefs, • Education status, • Previous experiences, etc • Information push and information pull • Opportunities and obstacles to communication • More attention on push than responding to need

  12. Communication & the knowledge cycle • Bliss in ignorance • Individual not aware of need, low risk perception • IEC, experience etc triggers need • Conscious incompetence • recognizes need, seeks and evaluates info • Conscious Competence • Apply info (+ve or -ve), develop skills, change behaviour • Unconscious competence • Utilize skills instinctively, sustain behaviour

  13. Challenges to communication:Situational/behavioral • Stagnation to increasing prevalence rates • Complacency Fatigue, ‘cure’, competing priorities Low risk/impact perception • High Couple discordance rates • When & how does the partner get HIV? • Limited service uptake e.g. for PMTCT • Message packaging, norms, beliefs, accessibility

  14. Situational Challenges cont’d • Gender disparity • High prevalence in females • Poor male behaviour indicators • Rapidly changing environments • information age -Internet, DSTV, video halls • Exposure to new behaviours, practices • Competing & conflicting messages • Information goes stale very fast • Dynamics of the epidemic • Changing body of knowledge • Shifting epidemic – young pple to adults

  15. Challenges to communication:Programmatic • Awareness rising Vs behaviour/ social change • Targeting the individual not situations • Behaviour influenced by situations • Blaming individuals • Stigmatizing messages & approaches • Information Inapplicability • Limited involvement of target audience in designing of messages & materials • Lack of local sources of information

  16. Programmatic challenges cont’d • Lack of evidence-base • What fuels epidemic, what works better • Limited strategic focus • Limited linkages to services • Failure to act on messages • Unfulfilled demands • Balancing communication for prevention and care • Limited capacity • Lack of standards • Impact on message quality

  17. Programmatic challenges cont’d • Fragmentation, limited coordination • Message inconsistency, duplication confusion • Competition, Conflict • Background of communicator • Level of investment - sustainability • No immediate results with communication • Communication a Life long investment

  18. Opportunities for scaled action • The success story – ever worked & still working • Reductions among young people, increased ART uptake • Community knowledge and commitment • Conducive policy environment • Open dialogue at various levels – Think Tank • Input in Policy and strategy development • Comprehensive Communication Strategy • Prevention Policy Paper, ABC Policy guideline • Utilizing other services: • health esp. reproductive health • Social, economic, religious, business etc

  19. Opportunities for scaled action • Build on existing knowledge base • Short and long term focus • Utilize entry points for social change • Vulnerability analysis report • Conceptual Framework for Communicating to young people • Risk behaviours, protective/harmful factors, domains within which they interact, key duty bearers • Participate in implementation of major communication campaigns • YEAH, PIASCY, ?

  20. Young Empowered And Healthy • Bases on the agreed Conceptual Framework • Campaign for all owned by none • Promotes common thinking, common voices • Consistency, experience sharing, common priorities • Building partnerships in communication • Compliment strengths, wider reach, optimal utilization of resources/systems • From awareness to social change • beyond individual, Under and beyond ABC • Experiences in involving young people

  21. YEAH Cont’d • Centered around Rock Point 259 drama • Over 4 million pple tuning in • Community participatory approaches • Phase 1: “Something for Something Love” (engaging in sex in exchange for favors, money or material goods) • Phase 2: “Be a Man” Changing male Gender expectations (Boys & men) • Common funding approaches • Wider coverage, social accountability Join YEAH Now, Tune in to Rock Point

  22. Proposals for way forward • Situations have changed – adopt approaches • Make communication specific to situations • Shift focus from individual to social change • Enhance information push with equal focus on meeting information demands • Harmonize communication for prevention and care • Work in partnerships • Wider reach, learn from lessons etc • Utilize non-traditional partners • Research, document, share

  23. HIV/AIDS Communication is the backbone of our response Reduce risk and vulnerability Reduce impacts

More Related