| Literature DB >> 32764128 |
Val Curtis1, Robert Dreibelbis2, Myriam Sidibe3, Jason Cardosi2, Jennifer Sara4, Chris Bonell5, Kaposo Mwambuli6, Soma Ghosh Moulik4, Sian White2, Robert Aunger2.
Abstract
While large-scale changes in population behaviour are required to reduce the transmission of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 virus, the emergency context is not conducive to the sort of careful communications planning that would normally be required to meet such a task. Rapid strategic communications planning in a pandemic by governments is, however, possible and necessary. Steps include setting up a dedicated communications task force, mobilising partners and resources, developing a creative brief and theory of change and overseeing the creation, testing, roll out and revision of content. In this short guide, we argue that a minimum of strategic planning can be undertaken rapidly, and that good use can be made of simple principles of behaviour change, even during pandemics. Our aim here is to provide a blueprint that governments and their partners, especially in low-income settings, can follow to design, coordinate and resource national communications efforts to combat the COVID-19 pandemic immediately and for the longer term. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: SARS; control strategies; hygiene; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32764128 PMCID: PMC7412616 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-002780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Breaking the chain of COVID-19 transmission in the community (distancing and hand hygiene preventive measures shown in red, not including surface hygiene and mask wearing).
Methods for rapid data gathering about COVID-19-related behaviour
| Method | Approach | Data |
| Qualitative in-depth phone interviews with convenience samples of target audiences, eg, six casual labourers, six domestic workers, six seniors. | What are you are doing now? | |
| Quantitative national telephone polling surveys, repeated. | Reported behaviour, knowledge, intentions, trends. | |
| Teachers asked to write or film and post-COVID-related behaviour stories. | Indicators and social and physical context of behaviour. | |
| Transport numbers, soap sales, sanitiser sales, google searches, food market activity, work absentee figures, school attendance, social media monitoring. | Indicators of actual behaviour. |
Example of a creative brief
| Activity name | COVID-19 communication brief | |
| | | |
| | ||
| | National focal person | |
| | 555–5555 | |
| | NFP@MoH.gov | |
| The purpose of this brief is to coordinate the design, planning and execution of compassionate, engaging and empowering communication materials in order to develop and sustain the health behaviours that will stop the spread of COVID-19 disease. The focus is on personal and social protective behaviours such as practising personal hygiene, maintaining physical distance, wearing masks in public and self-isolation in case of symptoms. | ||
| Minimising morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 in Tanzania | ||
| Make everyone want to help stop the spread of COVID-19 by practising the personal and social protective behaviours desired by the government. | ||
| Young people, aged 15–35 years. They are both the most exposed to the economic impact but also have a perception of invulnerability. They are slowest to adopt the behaviours necessary to flatten the curve. And while not as vulnerable as higher risk groups, they are not immune either. Seniors and those with chronic health condition most vulnerable to COVID-19. Potential partners who are willing to support the cause. Political leaders and government. Speak and understand the national language and their own vernacular languages. Travellers, self-employed and petty traders working hard to secure their future and most susceptible to catching and transmitting COVID-19 (but need practical information about how to safely continue earning a living). Families care about protecting their loved ones (but how to do so, practically, is not clear). Urban audience currently most at risk have GOOD access to TV, radio and social media via smart phones. Rural audience have LOW proliferation of smart phones, little access to social media pages. Fifty per cent listen to radio regularly. TV and cinema are currently watched in public places and information spreads by word of mouth, eg, marketplaces. | ||
| | ||
| We must all protect ourselves and others from the spread of coronavirus. | ||
| Relevance, compassion, empowerment, solidarity. | ||
| Professional, rational, informed, confident, reassuring. | ||
Scalable to national level at reasonable cost and with reasonable logistics. No direct focus on health; no death/disease/pathogens: not clinical or ‘public healthy’ in tone/feel. Focus on changing behaviour, not awareness. Emphasise the emotional as well as logical. Communicate through common understandings, story arc and show more than tell. Materials must show benefit/consequence to target audience. | ||
Scale of reach and engagement. Integration of above-the-line with the below-the-line communications. Presence of key influencers behind the campaign. | ||
| All materials: Must be engaging and memorable. Must reflect the overall brand. Should reflect the cultural nuances of different regions. Should unite people. | ||
Figure 2Generic theory of change.
Examples of potentially powerful communications materials on COVID-19
| Concept | Theory of change | Source | |
| People need to learn about new virus and how to respond. | Educational, but with a catchy song making the message memorable; seeing everyone play/sing the song can promote new norms of behaviour. | Bobi Wine and Nubian Li (Ugandan singers) | |
| Visual demonstration of effect of physical distancing on transmission. | Seeing consequences instantaneously at a ‘population’ level is more comprehensible to our visually-oriented brains. | Ohio State Department of Health | |
| People who wash hands are ‘one of us’. | Neighbours may gossip about you if you do not wash your hands, but they would be wrong! | Zambia Ministry of Health/CIDRZ/LSHTM | |
| We should praise some people for violating the new norms. | Truck drivers move constantly from place to place, getting close to each other, but are delivering vital resources to those that need them. | Iveco | |
| People who exercise at home are heroic for ensuring they do not expose others. | Celebrating personal hardship as socially valuable makes people more likely to avoid going back into social contexts. | Nike | |
| Get people to avoid public places by putting up billboards that ‘spoil’ plot-points on popular shows. | People will not want to be exposed to these ‘spoilers’ and so will stay home where they belong. | Miami Ad School (student-designed campaign) | |
| Uncomfortable reminder of moments when footballers refused to shake hands. | While refusing to shake hands may seem rude, nowadays people are actually showing their social conscience. | Liberdade agency |