TY - JOUR
T1 - Multivariate causal attribution and cost-effectiveness of a national mass media campaign in the Philippines
AU - Kincaid, D. Lawrence
AU - Do, Mai Phuong
N1 - Funding Information:
The Department of Health of the Philippines conducted a nationwide family planning communication campaign from August to December of 2000. In four television spots, an attractive couple with two children discusses how family planning has improved their lives, and then tells the audience that they too can find a contraceptive that is ‘‘suitable’’ for them. The key messages were based on previous research that revealed that (1) what women wanted most was a contraceptive method that is hiyang for them (a Tagalog word meaning ‘‘natural fit to one’s own body’’ ), and that (2) a husband’s support for family planning was necessary. The Secretary of Health ended each television spot with a promise that local health providers would help women in the audience find a method that is hiyang for them.5 The survey data used to evaluate the campaign were collected immediately after the campaign in June 2001 by an independent research agency, NFO-TRENDS. Both the campaign and the survey were conducted with funding from the United Agency for International Development and with technical assistance from the Center for Communication Programs of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
PY - 2006/2/1
Y1 - 2006/2/1
N2 - Cost-effectiveness analysis is based on a simple formula. A dollar estimate of the total cost to conduct a program is divided by the number of people estimated to have been affected by it in terms of some intended outcome. The direct, total costs of most communication campaigns are usually available. Estimating the amount of effect that can be attributed to the communication alone, however is problematical in full-coverage, mass media campaigns where the randomized control group design is not feasible. Single-equation, multiple regression analysis controls for confounding variables but does not adequately address the issue of causal attribution. In this article, multivariate causal attribution (MCA) methods are applied to data from a sample survey of 1,516 married women in the Philippines to obtain a valid measure of the number of new adopters of modern contraceptives that can be causally attributed to a national mass media campaign and to calculate its cost-effectiveness. The MCA analysis uses structural equation modeling to test the causal pathways and to test for endogeneity, biprobit analysis to test for direct effects of the campaign and endogeneity, and propensity score matching to create a statistically equivalent, matched control group that approximates the results that would have been obtained from a randomized control group design. The MCA results support the conclusion that the observed, 6.4 percentage point increase in modern contraceptive use can be attributed to the national mass media campaign and to its indirect effects on attitudes toward contraceptives. This net increase represented 348,695 new adopters in the population of married women at a cost of U.S. $1.57 per new adopter.
AB - Cost-effectiveness analysis is based on a simple formula. A dollar estimate of the total cost to conduct a program is divided by the number of people estimated to have been affected by it in terms of some intended outcome. The direct, total costs of most communication campaigns are usually available. Estimating the amount of effect that can be attributed to the communication alone, however is problematical in full-coverage, mass media campaigns where the randomized control group design is not feasible. Single-equation, multiple regression analysis controls for confounding variables but does not adequately address the issue of causal attribution. In this article, multivariate causal attribution (MCA) methods are applied to data from a sample survey of 1,516 married women in the Philippines to obtain a valid measure of the number of new adopters of modern contraceptives that can be causally attributed to a national mass media campaign and to calculate its cost-effectiveness. The MCA analysis uses structural equation modeling to test the causal pathways and to test for endogeneity, biprobit analysis to test for direct effects of the campaign and endogeneity, and propensity score matching to create a statistically equivalent, matched control group that approximates the results that would have been obtained from a randomized control group design. The MCA results support the conclusion that the observed, 6.4 percentage point increase in modern contraceptive use can be attributed to the national mass media campaign and to its indirect effects on attitudes toward contraceptives. This net increase represented 348,695 new adopters in the population of married women at a cost of U.S. $1.57 per new adopter.
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U2 - 10.1080/10810730600974522
DO - 10.1080/10810730600974522
M3 - Article
C2 - 17148100
AN - SCOPUS:33748522558
SN - 1081-0730
VL - 11
SP - 69
EP - 90
JO - Journal of health communication
JF - Journal of health communication
IS - SUPPL. 2
ER -