February 28, 2002

Bangladesh TV Soap Operas Featured at International Film Festival;
Series Success Highlights Effectiveness of Entertainment Education

BALTIMORE-- At the International Social Communication Cinema Festival
held this month in India, Festival organizers dubbed an entire day,
February 18, "Bangladesh Day" and screened all three television serial
dramas produced by the Bangladesh Center for Communication Programs
(BCCP).

With the theme of social communication through audiovisuals, the film
festival showcased all 13 episodes of "Shabuj Shathi" (Evergreen
Companion) and "Shabuj Chhaya" (Evergreen Shadows), and also several
episodes of the new drama "Eyi Megh, Eyi Roudra." (Now Cloud, Now
Sunshine).

The Baltimore-based Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication
Programs (JHU/CCP) provided technical assistance to BCCP for all three
dramas with the support of the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID).

Marking yet another achievement in the field of entertainment education,
BCCP's day-long showcase demonstrates how the subtle blend of public
health messages with mass media entertainment can generate highly
effective communication vehicles. While differing in storyline,
characters and setting, each of the three soap operas weave a series of
health topics into each episode, such as Vitamin A, diarrhea, family
planning, and HIV/AIDS.

Each episode ends by asking the audience members a series of questions
based on the drama. These quiz questions reinforce messages and spark
further reflection by viewers on select health topics.  As a result of
the 13-episode "Shabuj Chhaya", BCCP received an unprecedented 600,000
fan mail letters. The success of these dramas also led to paid
sponsorship from private companies.

According to formal evaluation research, "Shabuj Shathi" and "Shabuj
Chhaya" were both extremely successful in influencing audience attitudes
and behaviors related to health. While both "Shabuj Chhaya" and "Shabu
Shathi" revealed compelling audience impact data, one episode in
particular, that of HIV/AIDS, had an especially strong audience impact.
Of those surveyed, 74% who had watched "Shabuj Chhaya" were aware of
HIV/AIDS as opposed to 25% who did not watch the drama.

The new 26-episode serial, "Eyi Megh, Eyi Roudra" encourages people to
go to either Green Umbrella or Smiling Sun clinics for all family health
services. The Green Umbrella, a logo developed by BCCP in collaboration
with JHU/CCP, is now used by all Bangladeshi clinics, government,
non-government and private to symbolize integrated services. The more
recent Smiling Sun logo, developed in partnership with BCCP and JHU/CCP,
designates non-government organization (NGO) clinics that are in the
process of upgrading their quality of services.

JHU/CCP is a pioneer in the field of strategic, research-based
communication for behavior change and health promotion that has helped
advance the theory and practice of public health communication. As a
leader in the field and independent successor to JHU/CCP, BCCP provides
expertise in all aspects of Behavior Change Communication (BCC). Through
BCC program conceptualization, development, management implementation
and evaluation, the BCCP continues to successfully meet the many varied
health challenges of Bangladeshis in the 21st Century.

BCCP programs, coordinated in collaboration with national policy, design
program strategies that promote results-oriented multi-sectoral
collaboration, cost-effective communication and sustainable health
behavior change. BCCP has expertise in developing national BCC
strategies, national media campaigns, conducting training workshops,
building public-private partnerships, leveraging resources, conducting
evaluation research, formulating advocacy campaigns, overall program
management and designing community-based initiatives.

To find out more about BCCP, go to www.bangladesh-ccp.org. To find out
more about JHU/CCP, go to http://www.jhuccp.org.;

Kim Martin
Chief, Media Relations and Advocacy
Center for Communication Programs
Johns Hopkins University
111 Market Place
Baltimore, Maryland 21202
(410) 659-6140
fax (410) 659-6266




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