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Behavior Change Communication (BCC) Strategy

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Title: Behavior Change Communication (BCC) Strategy


1
Behavior Change Communication (BCC) Strategy
Pakistan Safe Drinking Water and
Hygiene Promotion Project (PSDW-HPP)
2
Basic Facts
  • 4,900 children under age of five die worldwide
    each day from infectious diarrhea due to unsafe
    drinking water
  • Diarrhea caused by unsafe water, inadequate
    sanitation, and poor hygiene accounts for 15 to
    18 percent of child deaths annually
  • In Pakistan, diarrheal diseases are estimated to
    kill 200,000 children under age of five/year (548
    per day)

3
Background of GOP Water Projects
  • In 2001, the Ministry of Environment presented
    National Environmental Action Plan in which one
    of the core areas of NEAP is Clean Drinking
    Water.
  • Pakistan, as a signatory to the Millennium
    Development Goals (MDGs), has committed to meet
    the targets set at the World Summit on
    Sustainable Development in 2002 through
  • Providing access to safe drinking water
    adequate sanitation for maximum population by the
    year 2015

4
Clean Drinking Water Initiative (CDWI)
  • PC-1 for a project, CDWI was approved to install
    445 water purification plants of 2,000 gallons
    per hour capacity at each District and Tehsil of
    the country to provide clean drinking water to
    the masses.
  • CLEAN DRINKING WATER FOR ALL (CDWA)
  • Realizing the utility of clean drinking water
    another project namely, Clean Drinking Water for
    All was approved to install 6,035 water
    purification plants, one at each Union Council of
    Pakistan at a project cost of Rs. 7,871.740
    million.

5
Pakistan Safe Drinking Water and Hygiene
Promotion (PSDW-HPP) ProjectObjective
  • To provide technical assistance in hygiene and
    sanitation promotion, BCC, and community
    mobilization, along with extensive capacity
    building in order to complement Pakistan's
    substantial investments in hardware for safe
    drinking water.

6
Project Geographical Coverage 28 Districts, 6
FATA Agencies and 6 Frontier RegionsPopulation-
30 million peopleNationwide media
campaignFundingUSAID 17.9 million for three
years
7
Project Components
  • Implement a comprehensive hygiene and sanitation
    promotion strategy reaching 30 million people
  • Institutional capacity and comprehensive
    technical review
  • Monitoring and evaluation

Stages
  • Strategy development January 2007- March 2007
  • Implementation April 2007-June 2009
  • Implementation Mechanism
  • Technical assistance
  • Grants to non-governmental organizations (NGOs)

8
Development of a Successful BCC Strategy
  • It is essential to identify and understand
    different elements that can have an impact,
    positive or negative, on an individuals
    willingness and ability to adopt a new practice.
  • While BCC can be quite effective, it does not
    operate in isolation and it can be undermined
    both by an insufficient understanding of how
    initiatives and activities support communication
    and, in turn, how communication supports these
    same initiatives and activities.

9
Framework for Designing the BCC Strategy
10
Process of Developing the BCC Strategy
  • Desk Review Nov-Dec 2006
  • Lack of prevalence of hand washing with soap
  • Lack of information on barriers and facilitators
  • Lack of awareness on causes of diarrhea-
    appreciation of seriousness considerably higher
  • Need for more research focusing on specific
    groups, in specific settings, on specific
    activities

11
Formative Research December 2006
  • Rural Urban Six locations Lahore, Lasbela,
    Muzaffarbad, Mansehra, Thatta, Mohmand Agency
  • Techniques FGDs (mothers, teachers, and health
    service providers), In-depth Interviews (Molvis),
    Observation and Trials for Improved Practices
    (TIPS) - mothers, fathers and school children)
  • Respondents Mothers/fathers with children under
    five years old, primary school children,
    teachers, Molvis, and lady health workers (LHWs)
  • Groups Mostly low socio economic strata, with
    low education

12
Findings..
  • Current behaviors/practices what are they
    doing?
  • Barriers and Facilitators for primary and
    secondary groups
  • Key influencers what and how can they act??
  • Target groups aspirations, perceptions and
    information needs
  • Recommendations and voices captured from
    primary and support groups prioritization of
    messages
  • Target group specific materials. Resources and
    channels of information

13
Going Beyond Research BCC Strategy and Plan-
April 2007
  • Formative Research Provided
  • Set of key recommendations which helped us to
    move forward
  • Develop a BCC Framework the identification of
    highest success areas
  • A set of feasible behaviors
  • Intervention Design and ME
  • BCC plans for mothers and fathers
  • What can the channels do and how will they do it

14
BCC Strategy Recommends
  1. Cooperation within the family and among community
    members is critical to the successful adoption of
    key hygiene practices.

15
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • Cluster behavior promotion approach, in three
    intervention areas
  • access to hardware
  • hygiene promotion
  • enabling environment

16
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 3. Women are critical to the success of hygiene
    promotion program. Dynamic female-to-female
    interactions designs should be given priority
    consideration.

17
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 4. For safe storage of drinking water, the
    practices of
  • using a long-handled scoop to remove water or
    pouring out drinking water should be promoted as
    key behaviors.

18
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 5. Hand washing should focus on hand washing with
    soap at two critical times before eating and
    preparation of foods and after defecation.

19
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 6. Water purification should focus on two stages
    (1) on awareness and knowledge of the need to
    purify home water sources, and (2) on two
    practices that provide acceptable, mutually
    reinforcing options.

20
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 7. Safe feces disposal should focus on households
    with latrines, where reinforcement of present
    positive latrine use could be combined with the
    hand washing with soap behavior. Where latrines
    are not available and where open defecation
    occurs, feces should be buried.

21
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 8. Emotion based approach The attributes of
    strength and beauty should be used repeatedly and
    often as they are strong motivators for changing
    behaviors.  They should be considered as part of
    the unifying theme of all materials produced.

22
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 9. Develop a new female cadre of volunteer
    hygiene promoters to reinforce and facilities the
    desired behavior among mothers.

23
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 10. Involve primary school children as they can
    be motivators and supporters of desired behaviors
    within the household.

24
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 11. The Imams should be considered as an
    excellent communication channel for husbands and
    other community members.

25
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 12. Mothers have placed an equal amount of
    importance on how messages are passed, as on
    what messages are passed. There should be
    emphasis on this tone in all its materials,
    media, and training.

26
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 13. Initiate possible social marketing
    initiatives with soap manufacturers.

27
BCC Strategy Recommends
  • 14. Initiate possible social marketing
    initiatives with water purification manufacturers
    for
  • promotion or enhancement of acceptable products
    for purification
  • creation of distribution channels through local
    faith-based organizations (FBOs) and
    community-based organizations (CBOs),
  • dirty water demonstrations
  • school fairs

28
Behavior Change Communication Strategy-
  • BCC strategy is the basis over which the whole
    hygiene promotion component of the project was
    built on
  • Emotion-based approach
  • Targets four key stakeholder groups
  • Community
  • Schools
  • Mass Media
  • Private Sector

29
BCC Strategy- From Theory to Action
  • Primary Target Audience
  • Mothers and fathers of children under five years
  • Channels to Reach Target Audience
  • Hygiene Promoters
  • Religious leaders--- Molvis/Imams
  • Doctors
  • Women volunteers
  • Teachers
  • Students of grade four
  • Local NGOs/CBOs
  • Media
  • Private sector partners

30
BCC Plan.Touching the family through integrated,
multiple activities
31
HP Activities in Communities-Mother Father
group sessions-Interactive Theater-Melas-Word
of mouth activities-Physician-provided
certificates-Activities and education at
Mosques-
32
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33
Fun, interactive learning activities for grade
four students in schools- Students as message
carriers to their parents- Ten activities-form
the learning component- Teacher activity book-
Promotional material w/private sector partners-
Student monitoring of assignments- Calendar take
home to reinforce messages for mothers
34
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35
Project Website www.safewaterpak.com
36
A Way Forward.National BCC Strategy
  • PSDW-HP project with the assistance of USAID
    will coordinate with MOE, MOSI UNICEF to
    develop a National BCC Strategy for the water
    and sanitation sectors.

37
  • Thank You
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