Arts, Media and Popular Culture
Rationale, Design, and Characteristics of the Multimedia Family Planning Campaign for a Small, Happy, and Prosperous Family in Ethiopia (SHaPE)
Background: Ethiopia, the second most populous country in Africa, has a total fertility rate of 4.6, a decrease from
5.5 in 2000. However, only 35.3% of women in the reproductive age group use modern family planning (FP)
methods, and the 22.3% of them who have an unmet need for family planning is among the highest rates in
sub-Saharan African countries. The Small, Happy, and Prosperous family in Ethiopia (SHaPE) is one of the country’s
first comprehensive multimedia family planning campaigns. Its purpose is to increase FP-related knowledge,
attitude, and practice of Ethiopians, particularly women of reproductive age.
Methods/Design: The SHaPE campaign has multiple components: (1) a nationwide representative survey, which
serves as formative research to identify region-specific and culture-appropriate media, messages, and barriers and
determinants of family planning; (2) a multimedia communication campaign intervention, including radio dramas
and other interpersonal, community-level, and mass media channels; and (3) campaign evaluation, including pre-,
process-, and post-evaluation research using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. The main target
population for SHaPE is reproductive age women and men in three regions: Amhara, Oromia, and Somali. These
regions take up about 66.6% of the entire country and have distinct ethnicities, cultures, and languages.
Discussion: SHaPE contributes to existing family planning research and intervention because it is theory- and
evidence-based, and it employs integrated marketing communications and entertainment-education approaches
with key messages that are tailored to audiences within unique cultures. But even within a country, a nationwide
campaign with uniform messages is neither possible nor desirable due to different cultures, norms, and languages
across regions. Last, media campaigns in developing and underdeveloped countries require constant monitoring of
political situations.
No Related Publications available