Impact Data - Journey of Life Radio Show
Baseline:
Before JOL aired, most of the youth surveyed said they did not believe they were at risk for HIV infection.
Most listeners (91%) reported that JOL positively influenced them to use family planning methods. 66.2% of urban youth surveyed in the final evaluation agreed that they were susceptible to HIV infection. Most listeners (95.1%) agreed that JOL made them believe there were effective ways to avoid HIV infection. Over 95% of the listeners said that JOL made them feel hopeful about avoiding HIV infection. Almost all of the listeners (97%) agreed that JOL made them believe that having children when they weren't ready was harmful. Females felt greater perceived severity than males from having children when they weren't ready. Female perceptions that they might have unwanted children if they didn't use family planning were more strongly influenced than male perceptions by JOL. About a quarter of the males (28%) felt increased susceptibility to having unwanted children due to JOL, while nearly double the percentage of females (51%) felt the same. JOL strongly influenced perceptions of self-efficacy with 97.6% of listeners saying the show made them believe they were able to use family planning. Most listeners (90.1%) said that JOL made them believe that family planning prevented one from having children unless one really wanted them.
Listeners (of all age groups) in the 2002 preliminary evaluation said that they related to the characters and the challenges they face in practising healthier behaviours. For example, one listener said she admired the resolve of one female character, Askale, to "stick to family planning in spite of her mother-in-law's constant nagging to have more children." Another listener said: "I know now that AIDS is transmitted through sexual intercourse. It also helped me to evaluate myself on the role I personally play to prevent and control the spread of HIV/AIDS."
Ninety-five percent of viewers judged the story quality to be very high; 85.9% called it entertaining; 85.9% said they wished it had lasted longer. A great majority (99.2%) of the respondents agreed or strongly agreed that JOL was educational. About 96.7% strongly agreed or agreed that they learned a lot about HIV/AIDS and family planning from JOL. Almost all of the listeners (95%) strongly agreed or agreed that JOL provided a lot of good information about HIV/AIDS and a similarly high percentage of listeners (93.4%) felt the same about family planning. More than half of the listeners (55.4%) indicated that JOL had a strong emotional impact on them.
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