{"id":1702,"date":"2019-09-19T07:06:10","date_gmt":"2019-09-19T07:06:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digitalgreen.org\/communicating-best-practices-in-maternal-child-health-nutrition-family-planning-through-icts\/"},"modified":"2024-01-11T06:26:33","modified_gmt":"2024-01-11T06:26:33","slug":"communicating-best-practices-in-maternal-child-health-nutrition-family-planning-through-icts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digitalgreen.org\/communicating-best-practices-in-maternal-child-health-nutrition-family-planning-through-icts\/","title":{"rendered":"Communicating Best Practices in Maternal Child Health, Nutrition & Family Planning Through ICTs"},"content":{"rendered":"
Digital Green is an international development organization that empowers rural communities by harnessing the collective power of technology and grassroots-level partnerships to promote good practices in agriculture, nutrition and health. We have been working with government agriculture extension systems for over a decade using the community video-based approach that has been a powerful tool in the hands of agriculture extension agents in over 22 countries across Asia and Africa.<\/p>\n
Since 2012, through a series of pilot projects across sub-Saharan Africa and India, we drew lessons that helped adapt the community video-based solution to health and nutrition messaging among rural communities who often receive scattered information regarding health and nutrition, and are often unaware of the government welfare programs that are in place or the importance of availing them.<\/p>\n
The pilots also helped us adapt and revise the video production and dissemination training modules for effective implementation of health and nutrition projects, which required more nuanced content and treatment than in agriculture. Analysis of the data and anecdotal evidence from those pilots suggested that communities saw value and relevance in the videos.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Our teams worked on improving the Data Management Information System to capture data and analyse trends related to the health projects. Additionally, with more experience, evidence, and observations from the eld, the health pilots were further streamlined by identifying best practices from the various pilot sites. Lessons such as the inclusion of men – to highlight their role in ensuring better health for the family, creating aspiration among the family to play a more supportive role. We captured successes, lessons, and challenges to define how this approach can be best utilized to trigger positive behavior change in the health domain.<\/p>\n