News Release

Life-saving radio campaign launches in Burkina Faso

Lonely Planet founders join together with the Wellcome Trust to tackle child mortality with a pioneering new project

Business Announcement

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Development Media International (DMI) and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) are running a cluster randomised controlled trial of an innovative child survival intervention. The project is funded by the UK's leading science foundation, The Wellcome Trust, and the Planet Wheeler Foundation, set up by the founders of the Lonely Planet travel series.

On March 7th, DMI will launch a campaign which will run for 2½ years and aims to save thousands of lives. The campaign involves the broadcast of health messages using radio spots (60-second adverts) and radio phone-in programmes. By broadcasting health messages that change the behaviours of pregnant women and new mothers, the project aims to reduce the large number of children dying before their fifth birthday in Burkina Faso.

"The project is innovative in three ways", says Roy Head, CEO of DMI. "Firstly, we're broadcasting messages on the most important underlying causes of death, not just individual issues. Secondly, we're broadcasting very intensively: ten spots per day, and two hours of phone-in programming every night on every station. Thirdly, we'll be measuring the impact more rigorously than has ever been done before. We're hoping to prove that we can change behaviours on a scale large enough to save a lot of lives."

The first radio spots to be broadcast this month will promote exclusive breastfeeding – a behaviour which reduces the risk of a child dying from diarrhoea or respiratory infections. The spots will be broadcast on seven community radio stations in Burkina Faso which have partnered with DMI to deliver the campaign.

DMI has worked with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine to produce a mathematical model, based on the Lancet's Child Survival Series, which calculates the number of lives that can be saved by a comprehensive media campaign. The model predicts that a campaign can reduce childhood mortality by 15-20% per year, by the third year. It also predicts that its cost-effectiveness (at between $2 and $9 per 'disability-adjusted life year' or DALY) is better than any other currently available intervention, including bed nets for malaria and childhood immunisations. If the model's predictions are validated, it will be the cheapest way of saving children's lives that exists.

The study represents the first time that the impact of mass media on lives saved has been either modelled or measured. "We'll be measuring the impact using a robust scientific methodology: a cluster randomised controlled trial. It will be the largest, most rigorous evaluation ever conducted of a mass media intervention and it will be exciting to find out how many lives can be saved using this approach", says Professor Simon Cousens, of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and the lead investigator.

The project relies on close partnerships within Burkina Faso. The evaluation of the intervention is managed in partnership with Centre Muraz, a biomedical research institute in Burkina Faso and the project is being delivered in collaboration with the Ministry of Health of Burkina Faso.

The funding of the project represents a unique combination of interests. The Wellcome Trust – the UK's leading scientific foundation – are funding the evaluation, while the media elements are funded by the Planet Wheeler Foundation, set up by Maureen and Tony Wheeler, the founders of the Lonely Planet travel series.

Dr Jimmy Whitworth, Head of International Activities at the Wellcome Trust, says: "This exciting study aims to answer the question 'Do Mass Media Campaigns Save Lives?'. This is a fundamental question for public health today, when television and radio are reaching more people around the world than ever before. While mass media campaigns are increasingly being used, they have never before been rigorously evaluated. The results of this study could dramatically change the way we approach mass communication for health in the future."

Tony Wheeler adds: "What interests us are the implications of this trial. If it shows that this is the cheapest way of saving lives ever devised, it could help to save millions of lives in the long term".

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Contact: Cathryn Wood on +44 (0)20 3058 1635 | +44 (0)7931 940134 | cathryn.wood@developmentmedia.net or Will Snell on +44 (0)20 3058 1631 | +44 (0)7712 600209 | will.snell@developmentmedia.net

NOTES FOR EDITORS

1. Development Media International (DMI) uses radio and television to run behaviour change campaigns that save lives in developing countries. It is the first media organisation to use scientific modelling in order to save the greatest number of lives in the most cost-effective way. www.developmentmedia.net

2. DMI are leading the intervention element of the project: a behaviour change campaign involving the broadcast of health messages on radio via spots (60-second adverts) and phone-in programmes. The intervention will begin in Burkina Faso on Wednesday 7 March 2012 and will run until 2014.

3. The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) is a world-leading centre for research and postgraduate education in public and global health, with 4000 students and more than 1300 staff working in over 100 countries. The School is one of the highest-rated research institutions in the UK, and was recently cited as one of the world's top universities for collaborative research. The School's mission is to improve health and health equity in the UK and worldwide; working in partnership to achieve excellence in public and global health research, education and translation of knowledge into policy and practice. www.lshtm.ac.uk

4. LSHTM is leading the research element of the project: a cluster randomised controlled trial. The evaluation of the intervention is managed in partnership with Centre Muraz, a biomedical research institute in Burkina Faso.

5. The Wellcome Trust is a global charitable foundation dedicated to achieving extraordinary improvements in human and animal health. It supports the brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical humanities. The Trust's breadth of support includes public engagement, education and the application of research to improve health. It is independent of both political and commercial interests. www.wellcome.ac.uk

6. The Planet Wheeler Foundation was established in 2008 by Maureen and Tony Wheeler, founders of Lonely Planet Publications. Planet Wheeler is based in Melbourne, Australia and currently funds over 60 projects in the developing world. The Foundation supports practical and effective projects which make a difference in the alleviation of poverty. www.planetwheeler.org

7. The World Health Organisation classifies any intervention that costs below $100 per DALY as "good", and below $25 as "excellent". The cheapest intervention in the authoritative literature (DCPII) is childhood immunisations ($8 per DALY in Africa, $16 in Asia). Costs for other interventions include DOTS treatment for TB ($8-$263), insecticide-treated bednets for malaria ($2-$24), Integrated Management of Childhood Illness ($9-$218), increased primary care coverage for maternal and neonatal care ($82-$409), and antiretroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS ($673-$1494).

8. Burkina Faso is a landlocked nation in the Sahel region of West Africa and has a population of 16.9 million (UN, 2011). Burkina Faso ranks 181 out of 187 on UNDP's Human Development Index and more than one in ten children in Burkina Faso dies before their fifth birthday.


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