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AFRICA:
Media getting the word out on HIV/AIDS
IRIN News
July 27, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54828
JOHANNESBURG - Media coverage of health
issues in sub-Saharan Africa has been inadequate in terms of both
content and quantity, but more creative approaches are now being
used to address these shortcomings.
"Some major social issues of our times are simply not covered, like
gender and AIDS," Colleen Lowe Morna, director of GenderLinks, a
Southern African think-tank, told African editors and journalists
at a conference organised by the International Women's Media Foundation
(IWMF) in Johannesburg last week to discuss ways of improving health
coverage.
A survey by GenderLinks earlier this year found that HIV/AIDS accounted
for only three percent of all news items carried by southern African
media, despite the region being the worst hit by the pandemic. By
comparison, South African papers allocated sport 20 percent to 25
percent of reporting space.
"Media organisations and their editors are conservative and hard
to change," commented Tom Mshindi, former editor of The Standard
newspaper in Kenya.
Mshindi opened the doors of The Standard, one of the oldest newspapers
in Africa, to a two-year project called Maisha Yetu ('Our Lives'
in Swahili), funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation via
the IWMF. Its strategy is to improve the coverage of AIDS, tuberculosis
and malaria by working intensively from the publisher to the reporters
in a newspaper or magazine.
Six media houses in Botswana, Senegal and Kenya became Maisha Yetu
Centres of Excellence, with a local trainer assigned to each. To
ensure managerial buy-in, the head of each organisation was also
targeted, to create champions of health reporting in mid- and upper-level
management.
After carrying out a needs assessment, the trainer designed a plan,
including workshops to improve technical and information skills,
personal mentoring, widening access to sources, and persuading mid-level
editors to assign more space to health.
Two years later the quantity and the quality of health stories has
grown significantly, with several participating journalists receiving
awards for their work.
Meanwhile, Internews, an NGO dealing with the media, has been improving
the capacity of radio journalists in Kenya to report on HIV/AIDS.
In 2004 it set up a digital radio studio and media resource centre
in downtown Nairobi as part of its Local Voices project, where radio
producers have free access to all facilities, telephone and internet.
They are coached in scriptwriting and research by a full-time trainer
and producer, and can put together programmes for broadcast by their
own radio stations.
Practical training workshops with a curriculum of 70 percent technical
skills and 30 percent information on HIV/AIDS are open to all radio
producers. "If journalists lack the technical skills they won't
be able to produce good stories, no matter how much they know about
AIDS," said Internews senior resident adviser Mia Malan.
In the first year of Local Voices, non-sponsored news stories on
HIV increased by 225 percent, and more were aired in prime time,
while the topics broadened to include religion, sexual abuse, nutrition
and people living with HIV.
"I saw editors go from the point of resistance to the point of active
interest in health issues," remarked Emily Nwankwo, a media consultant
in Nairobi.
But the gatekeepers - editors who control space and resources -
remain a problem, as they prefer to focus on political and economical
reporting, rather than health coverage. The Southern African Editors
Forum (SAEF) has adopted an HIV/AIDS policy and media action plan
to encourage editors to provide space, resources, training and motivation
for reporting on the pandemic.
The AIDS story, says SAEF, should be covered "with imagination,
initiative and sensitivity to gender, and the larger social forces
driving the epidemic."
SAEF recently developed guiding principles for ethical reporting
on HIV/AIDS and gender, and has also agreed to introduce workplace
policies on HIV/AIDS and gender. The Times of Zambia newspaper and
the Kaya FM radio station in South Africa are pioneering this process.
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