RADIO PROGRAMMING GUIDE FOR PRODUCERS
A
new HIV/AIDS programming guide for radio program producers
is now available. Designed to provide ideas about longer form
programs such as talk shows, documentaries, news and magazine
programs that expand the key themes of the YOU campaign, the
guide follows the unfolding saga of the mini radio drama series Can
Tru Luv Withstand the Test? The series, now in its second
year, follows the daily lives of a group of twenty-somethings
as they navigate their way through the challenges of early
adulthood. The current series focus specifically on themes
of gender equity, stigma reduction, HIV-testing, and multiple
concurrent partnerships.
To access the Programming Guide in Arabic, English, French
or Portuese click on the appropriate link below.
To hear episodes of Can Tru Luv Withstand the Test? click here
RADIO PROGRAMMING GUIDE FOR PRODUCERS Supplement One
RADIO PROGRAMMING GUIDE FOR PRODUCERS Supplement Two
RADIO PROGRAMMING GUIDE FOR PRODUCERS Supplement Three
RADIO PROGRAMMING GUIDE FOR PRODUCERS Supplement Four
This reporting guide is designed for journalists who are covering the global epidemic for the first time and for those who have covered it previously.
The Kaiser Family Foundation undertook this project as part of its continuing commitment to supporting good journalism and to combating HIV/AIDS through public education and awareness.
While the media has many roles – including to inform, to entertain and to be a public watchdog – its greatest challenge is to reflect the lives of its readers, listeners and viewers. The impact of AIDS has led to calls for a special role for the media in covering the epidemic. The media, through its representation of society, helps define perceptions of cultural norms. Through critical reporting, asking questions and seeking stories beyond the popular headlines, reporters can stimulate debate and challenge these perceptions. This booklet is published by the Soul City Institute for the OneLove in South Africa.
This book explains why having many partners puts one at risk. The book provides suggestions for people to do in their community to contribute to social change. This book was written and produced by Soul City: Institute for Health and Development Communication as part of the OneLove campaign.
This guide is designed to be used by journalists and media personnel to plan and execute the production and broadcast of entertainment-education serial dramas for HIV prevention. It focuses on the social-content (educational) portion of such programmes and describes strategies that can overcome cultural and informational barriers to accessing health services.
The guide provides a detailed explanation of a methodology created by Miguel Sabido, which has been proven to successfully reach and change the behaviour of large numbers of people. It takes a step-by-step approach, from research through monitoring and evaluation.
The State of the Epidemic, the Changing Response & the Prognosis
25 years of HIV
Reflecting on how far we have come scientifically since isolating HIV in 1983, Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) at the US National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, and chief of the NIAID Laboratory of Immunoregulation, urges a renewed commitment to the far greater challenges ahead, especially that of vaccine development.
Know the Facts about HIV/AIDS
Sources:
- CDC Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention's Frequently Asked Questions About HIV and AIDS
- IAVI's FAQ: Women and HIV/AIDS
-
Kaiser Journalism Briefings on HIV/AIDS ReportingNIH How HIV Causes AIDS and The Evidence That HIV Causes AIDS
- UNAIDS Questions & Answers, November 2004
Public Opinion and HIV/AIDS: Facing Up to the Future?
Across fifteen countries surveyed in Round 2 of the Afrobarometer, our data indicate that large proportions of people (especially in East and Southern Africa) have either lost family or friends to AIDS, or suffer under the burdens of AIDS by caring for sick family members or orphans. Yet despite exposure to the pandemic, we find that ordinary Africans have not yet grasped its full collective social, economic or political significance. Poor people demote AIDS to a low priority problem behind more immediately pressing concerns like jobs or hunger. Citizens are undecided about whether their governments should divert scarce resources from these and other important priorities to fight the AIDS epidemic in their country.
The Afrobarometer is an independent, nonpartisan research project that measures the social, political and economic atmosphere in Africa. Afrobarometer surveys are conducted in more that a dozen African countries and are repeated on a regular cycle. To read more on this series, click here.
UNAIDS/WHO AIDS Epidemic Update: December 2006
The annual AIDS epidemic update reports on the latest developments
in the global AIDS epidemic. Sub-Saharan remains the most affected
region in the world. Two thirds of all people living with HIV live
in this region––24.7 million people in 2006.Almost three quarters of all adult and child deaths due to AIDS occurred in sub-Saharan Africa––2.1 million of the global 2.9 million deaths due to AIDS.
With maps and regional summaries, the 2006 edition provides the most recent estimates of the epidemic’s scope and human toll, explores new trends in the epidemic’s evolution.
> Website
> Fact Sheet - Global Facts
> Fact Sheet - AIDS Epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa
> Complete Report - English
> Complete Report - Français
Global Health Reporting and Global Health Facts
These websites – www.globalhealthreporting.org and www.globalhealthfacts.org – provide timely news summaries, information and global data on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria for journalists and others.
Get in-depth information and resources on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria for each country.
> Algeria > Djibouti > Madagascar > Sierra Leone > Angola > Egypt > Malawi > Somalia > Benin > Equatorial Guinea > Mali > South Africa > Botswana > Eritrea > Mauritania > Sudan > Burkina Faso > Ethiopia > Mauritius > Swaziland > Burundi > Gabon > Morocco > Tanzania > Cameroon > Gambia > Mozambique > Togo > Cape Verde > Ghana > Namibia > Tunisia > Central Africa Republic > Guinea > Niger > Uganda > Chad > Guinea-Bissau > Nigeria > Zambia > Congo-Brazzaville > Kenya > Rwanda > Zimbabwe > Côte d'Ivoire > Lesotho > Senegal > Democratic Rep. of Congo > Liberia > Seychelles Fact Sheet: The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa
This fact sheet provides an overview of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa.
> WebsiteFact Sheet: The Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic
This updated fact sheet provides the latest data on the global HIV/AIDS epidemic, including impact by region, on women and young people, and data on the global response.
> WebsiteThe Caribbean Broadcast Media Partnership on HIV/AIDS (CBMP)
The Caribbean Broadcast Media Partnership on HIV/AIDS (CBMP) is an unprecedented coalition of 43 major Caribbean commercial and public broadcast companies. The CBMP represents an unprecedented collaboration by leading broadcasters in the Caribbean to develop a coordinated regional public awareness campaign on HIV/AIDS. The Partnership is unique because the media companies themselves drive the development of the campaign. Broadcasters have also made a significant financial commitment by pledging concrete programming assets – up to 12 minutes per day – for placement of campaign materials. The commitment of broadcasters is defined by an alignment of interests and expectations; airtime is not purchased for placement of HIV/AIDS messaging. As visible and influential opinion leaders in their respective communities, the media’s active engagement in the fight against HIV/AIDS also sends a powerful signal to policymakers and other stakeholders about the importance of a collaborative response to the epidemic.
LIVE UP: Love. Protect. Respect.
The LIVE UP campaign was developed by the CBMP with support from a regional advisory committee of media and HIV/AIDS experts. It is the first media-led campaign on HIV/AIDS to reach across the entire Caribbean and includes new specially-produced television and radio public service ads (PSAs), rights-free long-form programming, and informational materials for CBMP broadcasters to employ in their outreach efforts. Emphasizing personal action, LIVE UP links people together with one message of hope and possibility and inspires everyone to consider what is within their power to stem the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Television Producers on HIV and AIDS
The
Global Network of Young TV Producers on HIV and AIDS involves
the participation of broadcasting organizations in Africa, Asia
Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Europe. The capacity
building project aims to improve the professional competence of
young television producers reporting on HIV and AIDS but also
mobilizes long-term commitment of regional and sub-regional broadcasting
and media training organizations in support of the prevention,
treatment, and care of HIV and AIDS.
HIV/AIDS in Africa – ACTafrica – The World Bank Program
To support implementation of its HIV/AIDS strategy, the World
Bank has established a multisectoral
AIDS Campaign Team for Africa – ACTafrica. The team serves as the region's focal point and clearinghouse on HIV/AIDS and provides a variety of services, including:- Supporting implementation of the Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program for Africa (MAP) program;
- Supporting African countries through knowledge dissemination and exchange;
- Mainstreaming HIV/AIDS into the Bank's work in multiple sectors;
- Supporting Bank country teams in addressing HIV/AIDS in their country assistance strategies;
- Building HIV/AIDS impact assessment into existing environmental and/or social assessment processes;
- Strengthening and expanding the Bank's partnership with UNAIDS, as well as with key agencies, non-governmental organizations, and donors.
African Medical & Research Foundation

Founded in 1957, AMREF is the only international health development NGO that has its headquarters in Africa, and 97% of the staff are African. AMREF implements projects to learn, and shares that learning with others to advocate for changes in health policy and practice. AMREF aims to close the gap that prevents people from accessing their basic right to health.The U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (Emergency Plan/PEPFAR)
The U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief
(Emergency Plan/PEPFAR) is the largest commitment ever
by any nation for an international health initiative
dedicated to a single disease-- a five-year, $15 billion, multifaceted approach to combating the disease around the world. Through the Emergency Plan, the U.S. Government is working with international, national and local leaders worldwide to support integrated prevention, treatment and care programs.
The Emergency Plan supports the multisectoral national responses in host nations through the principles known as the "Three Ones": - one national plan, one national coordinating authority, and one national monitoring and evaluation system. Rather than mandating that all contributors do the same things in the same ways, the Three Ones facilitate complementary and efficient action in support of host nations.

Based in France, this French-language site produces radio and television programs on health issues, including HIV/AIDS.
> Website
Journalists Against AIDS (JAAIDS) Nigeria
Website offers HIV/AIDS
information for the following West African
countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon,
Chad, Niger, Côte d'Ivoire, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana,
Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Liberia, Mauritania,
Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and
Togo. Also contains information on the media
and HIV/AIDS in Africa, links, and the Nigeria-AIDS
eForum. In English and French.
> WebsiteKaisernetwork.org
Kaisernetwork.org,
an online resource for non-partisan, timely,
and in-depth coverage of health policy developments,
debates, and discussions, provides summaries
of the latest HIV/AIDS health press coverage
as well as transcripts and live and archived
webcasts of issue-based briefings and other
health events.> Website
South
Africa's national HIV prevention programme for youth
combines country-wide HIV prevention services for
young people through government clinics, schools
and community-based outreach programs with a sustained
high profile multi-media HIV/AIDS education campaign.
loveLife's media materials are available rights
free on request.> WebsiteSoul City
Soul
City (a long running South African public health
edutainment series) aims to adapt Soul City media
(TV, radio and print) in 8 sub-saharan African countries
and to provide systematic training in the development
of a multi-media health initiative. Soul City is
currently working with local partners in Lesotho,
Swaziland, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia and Malawi
and is in the process of finding appropriate partners
in Zimbabwe and Mozambique. Each local partner will
identify core Soul City material (radio, TV, and
print) that they wish to adapt in their country.> Website
