2008
AfriComNet Annual Award for Excellence in HIV/AIDS
Communication in Africa
Winners
Mass Media Category
Winners
1. Urunana Radio Soap Opera, Rwanda
Produced by the Urunana Development Communication,
Urunana radio soap opera is broadcast on BBC
great lakes service and Radio Rwanda with a
focus on rural women of reproductive age and
youth. Based on formative research and audience
surveillance, the radio soap opera utilizes
a multi-pronged needs based and community participatory
entertainment approaches to discuss HIV/AIDS
and sexuality issues that would ordinarily be
considered taboo by the Rwanda community. Over
960 episodes have been broadcast since 1999
reaching more than 10 million people across
the Kinyrwanda –Kirundi area in the great
lakes region with messages on HIV/AIDS prevention,
care and treatment; stigma and discrimination;
voluntary counseling & testing (VCT); prevention
of mother to child transmission (PMTCT); and
nutrition for people living with HIV and AIDS
(PLWA’s).
Due to its success and appeal to the target
audience and partners, the Urunana edutainment
radio series model has been adopted by other
organizations to address other social issues
in Rwanda namely: La Benevolencija soap opera
with a theme on unity and reconciliation; Population
services International (PSI) Solange radio drama
series to address youth and sexuality; Ministry
of Justice radio drama series on domestic violence;
and Population Media Center (PMC) radio drama
on agriculture. Based on the credibility of
the Urunana radio soap opera, Urunana community
development is now one of the national HIV/AIDS
commission (CNLS) mandated organizations to
review messages on HIV/AIDS.
2. Living and Loving (LiLo) Radio Program,
Zambia
Produced by Health Communication Partnership
(HCP), Zambia, LiLo radio series is a highly
educative, skills building and behavior change
radio program that unfolds over 26 episodes,
each 30 minutes long and broadcast in eight
languages to address HIV/AIDS related stigma
and discrimination as well as to increase uptake
of care and treatment services. LiLo radio program
began in 2006 and is focused on people living
with HIV/AIDS (PLWA’s) and their caregivers.
LiLo radio program is produced in a magazine
format including interviews, slogans, testimonials,
drama, letters, music and local traditional
proverbs enabling large scale provision of accurate,
consistent and reliable information to PLWA’s
and their care givers.
LiLo radio program reaches 60 % of the Zambia
population through two national broadcasting
networks and an additional 20% through 12 community
radio stations. Furthermore, PLWA radio listening
groups of 10 -15 people exist in 22 districts
in the country.
Community/Interpersonal Category Winner
1. Wellness Champion Program, Standard
Bank Group Africa
Standard Bank Group Africa launched a comprehensive
workplace HIV/AIDS program in 2002 that has
been rolled out to 15 other African countries
reaching approximately 40,000 employees and
their immediate family members. Started in the
groups South Africa’s operations, the
holistic workplace health and wellness program
is an educative, awareness creation and disease
management program with special emphasis on
HIV/AIDS.
Key to the implementation and awareness of
the program are the banks over 715 peer volunteer
‘wellness champions’ that communicate
the banks policy and employees benefits; initiate
education and awareness campaigns, refer infected
and affected colleagues to appropriate services;
and provide regular feedback about the program
effectiveness.
All the wellness champions undergo a training
of trainer HIV/AIDS focused course, based on
the award winning ‘Bridges of Hope (BoH)’
equipping them with broad life skills to address
issues around HIV prevention, care, treatment
and social support including positive living.
The bank has an inbuilt volunteer incentive
program as an integral component of the wellness
champions program. A wellness champion that
facilitates or co-facilitates at minimum 5 BoH
training sessions at the workplace or community
plus submission of a satisfactory report gets
BoH certified. To-date, the bank has 320 standard
bank wellness champions certified in 11 countries.
Furthermore, BoH, is an accredited course by
the Sector Education and Training Authority
in South Africa (SETA), which enables wellness
champions to gain credits towards a degree or
other formal qualification. Standard bank now
has 125 wellness champions that have received
SETA accreditation.
Social Marketing
Category Winner
1. The Good Life Campaign, Uganda
Produced by the Uganda Health marketing Group
(UHMG), Uganda, the Good Life Campaign focuses
on priority health concerns in Uganda specifically
HIV/AIDS prevention and palliative care; family
planning an child survival. The campaign targets
the entire family with a focus on young couples,
care givers of children under 5 years of age,
pregnant women and PLWA. The Good Life Campaign
is a unique integrated marketing approach that
provides strong continual links between products,
practices and services while sustaining mutually
beneficial private/public partnerships.
The campaign utilized an interactive multi-channel
game show that aired weekly on television and
radio and nationwide community road shows. Its
entertainment–educative format broke message
fatigue with each game episode aimed to increase
knowledge, facilitate couple communication and
promote positive health behaviors including
correct and consistent use of social marketed
products namely non-prescriptive FP methods,
insecticide treated nets, water treatment tablets,
and oral dehydration salts (ORS)
Launched in October 2007, the campaign aired
24 episodes on two national television stations;
24 radio episodes in 5 languages on 12 local
FM stations; and conducted 120 roads shows reaching
approximately 9 million Ugandans through the
three communication channels.
Multi-channel
Category Winner
1. Sports for Life, Cote d’Ivoire
Sports for life (SFL) program is produced by
the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School
of Public Health Center for Communication Programs
(JHU/CCP), Cote d’Ivoire in collaboration
with the office of social and academic mobilization
(DMOSS) and the Abidjan city government. SFL
was launched in 2006 after the Cote d’Ivoire
team qualified for the world cup capitalizing
on the national pride & power of sports
to build life skills and promote healthy behaviors
among youth aged 10 -15 years. This was in view
of the documented evidence that youth 15 -24
are particularly at risk of HIV/AIDS in Cote
d’Ivoire.
The evidence driven SFL model utilizes a multi-channel
approach with five core components namely: group
activities using participatory life skills curriculum;
individual extra curricula activities; community
outreach activities; entrainment education and
promotion of celebrity ambassadors through mass
media; and heavily publicized youth tournaments
sponsored by the sponsored by the private sector.
To date, JHU/CCP has trained 129 trainers from
partner organizations in SFL approach, who have
implemented the program with 1581 youth from
soccer centers and community teams. SFL has
reached 7500 youth and adults through community
outreach events and over 24,000 youth and adults
through SFL tournaments. An SFL mass media campaign
conducted during the Africa cup of nations tournament
of 2008 is estimated to have reached 5 million
viewers nationally with 600 attending community
vents and up to 1000 receiving voluntary counseling
and testing (VCT) services.
Chairman’s
Award Winner
Mr. Warren Feek, the Executive Director of
Communication Initiative, which is a partnership
of organizations seeking to support the enhanced
impact of communication interventions on development
issues, for his outstanding contribution to
HIV/AIDS prevention and mitigation of through
communication.
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