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Estimating Causal Effects from Family Planning Health Communication Campaigns Using Panel Data: The “Your Health, Your Wealth” Campaign in Egypt

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  • Paul L Hutchinson
  • Dominique Meekers

Abstract

Background: Health communication campaigns – involving mass media and interpersonal communication - have long been utilized by national family planning programs to create awareness about contraceptive methods, to shift social norms related to fertility control, and to promote specific behaviors, such as the use of condoms, injectable methods or permanent sterilization. However, demonstrating the effectiveness of these campaigns is often complicated because the infeasibility of experimental designs generally yields statistically non-equivalent samples of campaign-exposed and unexposed individuals. Methods: Using data from a panel survey of reproductive age women in Egypt, we estimate the effects of the multimedia health communication campaign “Your Health, Your Wealth” (“Sahatek Sarwetek”) on precursors to contraceptive use (e.g., spousal communication, birth spacing attitudes) and on modern contraceptive use. Difference-in-differences and fixed effects estimators that exploit the panel nature of the data are employed to control for both observed and unobserved heterogeneity in the sample of women who self-report recall of the messages, thereby potentially improving upon methods that make no such controls or that rely solely on cross-sectional data. Findings: All of the estimators find positive effects of the “Your Health, Your Wealth” campaign on reproductive health outcomes, though the magnitudes of those effects diverge, often considerably. Difference-in-differences estimators find that exposure to the campaign increases the likelihood of spousal discussions by 14.4 percentage points (pp.) (SE = .039, p

Suggested Citation

  • Paul L Hutchinson & Dominique Meekers, 2012. "Estimating Causal Effects from Family Planning Health Communication Campaigns Using Panel Data: The “Your Health, Your Wealth” Campaign in Egypt," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 7(9), pages 1-14, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0046138
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0046138
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    1. Rockers, Peter C. & Røttingen, John-Arne & Shemilt, Ian & Tugwell, Peter & Bärnighausen, Till, 2015. "Inclusion of quasi-experimental studies in systematic reviews of health systems research," Health Policy, Elsevier, vol. 119(4), pages 511-521.
    2. Stella Babalola & Olamide Oyenubi, 2018. "Factors explaining the North–South differentials in contraceptive use in Nigeria: A nonlinear decomposition analysis," Demographic Research, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany, vol. 38(12), pages 287-308.
    3. Debayan Pakrashi & Surya Nath Maiti & Abhishek Gautam & Priya Nanda & Kakoli Borkotoky & Nitin Datta, 2022. "Family planning campaigns on television and contraceptive use in India," International Journal of Health Planning and Management, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 37(3), pages 1492-1511, May.

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