Correspondence to Frey Gugsa; [email protected]
Strengths and limitations of this study
The strengths of our study include its novelty, its multiyear analysis, the ‘constructed week’ sampling technique—which is more efficient and accurate and less biased than random or consecutive day sampling of newspaper content—and the rigorous content analysis based on prior work in the field.
The cross-sectional nature of our study allowed us to examine the associations between the amount and type of media coverage of maternal health and progress on achieving Millennium Development Goal 5 (MDG 5). We used z-test analysis for proportions with a Bonferroni adjustment to compare the three countries' newspapers. However, since this was a cross-sectional study, we cannot establish the causality and temporality of the observed relationships. The associations observed could, for example, be due to unaccounted confounding factors.
We excluded native language newspapers, newspapers without online archives and other media such as television and radio, which could have introduced bias.
The searchable archive of South Africa's Sunday Times only goes as far back as 1 January 2008 and South Africa's The Times archive starts in October 2010. Therefore, the twofold increase in the publication rate of maternal health articles from 2010 to 2011 observed in South Africa’s Sunday Times/The Times may be an artefact of our study design.
For the period 1 January 2008 to 31 March 2013, there was insufficient information in the online newspaper archives to determine the total number of all articles in each of the three newspapers. Therefore, without such a denominator, we were unable to determine the proportion of articles in each newspaper that was focused on maternal health or the change in the proportions over time.
Introduction
Millennium development goal 5
In the year 2000, United Nations (UN) member states adopted the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).1 The fifth goal, MDG 5, focuses on maternal health and has two targets.1 The first (‘target 5A’) is to reduce the maternal mortality ratio (MMR) by 75% between the years 2000 and 2015, and the second (‘target 5B’) is to achieve universal access to reproductive health by 2015.1 Progress towards MDG 5 is uneven across different countries—some countries are on track to reach the goal, some have made progress but are not on track, and some have made no progress.1 2 In 2005, a global movement known as Countdown to 2015 was established to track, stimulate and support country progress towards reducing child mortality and improving maternal health.2 The latest Countdown to 2015 report, published in 2012, found that out of the 75 countries that are responsible for 95% of all maternal deaths, only 9 are on track to reach MDG 5.2 Forty countries have made progress but are not on track and 25 countries have made insufficient or no progress. No data are available on South Sudan as separate from Sudan, as the data were collected in 2010 before the countries separated.2
In response to this ongoing crisis of avertable maternal mortality, multiple initiatives have been launched to accelerate implementation of maternal health interventions (table 1).1 3 Countries with a high burden of maternal mortality can accelerate progress towards MDG 5 if they scale up coverage of evidence-based maternal and reproductive health interventions (eg, family planning and skilled birth attendance).1 For example, studies suggest that in the 49 lowest-income countries, scaling up reproductive health packages to 95% coverage would prevent up to 32% of maternal mortality.1 Despite this evidence, such interventions have not yet been delivered at scale, due to a combination of factors such as a lack of domestic resources, political commitment and leadership, as well as inconsistent international funding.1
Table 1Examples of recent initiatives aimed at scaling up health interventions in low-income and middle-income countries, including maternal health interventions1
International Health Partnership | 2007 | To focus on health systems and the need to improve aid effectiveness |
High Level Task Force on Innovative International Financing for Health Systems | 2008 | To lay out recommendations for mobilising and channelling financing for health systems. It recommended the creation of a joint Health Systems Funding Platform by GAVI-the Vaccine Alliance, the Global Fund and the World Bank |
UN Health 4 (H4), comprising the WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF and the World Bank. The H4 became the H4+after UNAIDS joined the group | 2008 | To improve coordination at the country level and jointly raise the required resources. It focuses on 25 high-burden priority countries |
African Union Summit, Kampala | 2009 | To accelerate regional commitments and efforts to reduce maternal mortality in Africa |
The Global Strategy for Women's and Children's Health | 2010 | To align all actors around a single strategic approach linked to significant financial, policy and service delivery commitments to achieve MDGs 4 and 5 |
London Family Planning Summit* | 2012 | To meet the family planning needs of 120 million girls and women in developing countries by 2020 |
*Family Planning Summit, 2012.3
MDG, Millennium Development Goal.
The role of the media in shining a spotlight on global health challenges
The agenda setting role of news media
It is well documented that the news media can influence which public policy issues receive attention and which are ignored. Through the process of ‘agenda setting’, particular news stories are prioritised over other stories.4 This process determines which issues are presented to the public.4 For example, Thapa,5 based at Family Health International in Nepal, noted that the media played a critical role through ‘agenda setting’ in the collective effort that led to Nepal’s parliament to pass a safe abortion law in 2002. Local newspapers and magazines published evidence of the public health consequences of unsafe abortion along with their suggestions for policy and programming.5 Thapa5 wrote that ‘journalists were centrally involved in these tasks’. This interaction between media and policy demonstrates how the quantity and quality of media coverage of a specific public health problem can both influence, as well as reflect, public health action directed at that problem.
Framing
The media can play an important role in influencing not only what issues are presented to mass audiences, but also how these are perceived, and what importance the public should attach to them by framing the issue in specific ways.6 The process of framing defines not only what problems are seen as important, but also their causes and potential solutions.6 As Menashe and Siegel6 describe it, “a frame is a way of packaging and positioning an issue so that it conveys a certain meaning.” For example, framing maternal mortality not just as a development issue but also as a human rights concern can enhance accountability for maternal deaths at the national level.7
Poor media coverage reflected in lack of progress in tackling specific diseases
There is some evidence to suggest that there is an association between media coverage of a global health problem and policy attention towards that problem. For example, Hudacek et al8 found that between 1981 and 2008, HIV, TB and malaria received nearly five times greater media coverage than three leading causes of child mortality: pneumonia, diarrhoea and measles.8 HIV, TB and malaria also received correspondingly greater policy attention and research funding. Similarly, Balasegaram et al9 found that HIV, TB and malaria received greater funding and international media coverage than three neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)—human African trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis and Chagas disease. The authors concluded that while several factors contribute to the lack of progress in drug development for NTDs, such as market failure in developing drugs, the lack of media coverage and low visibility of those diseases exacerbates the neglect.9
Ultimately, policy makers’ decisions on health issues are not based solely on scientific evidence. As Hudacek et al8 say: “Policy decisions about funding do not occur in a sociopolitical vacuum. The media play an important role in both providing information to policy makers as well as influencing public deliberation on public health issues.”
How the media reflects public health policy through targeted media campaigns
Another way in which the media influences health outcomes is through the deliberate use of targeted media campaigns. In a study in Egypt, for example, Campbell and colleagues found that one factor associated with Egypt's success in reducing its MMR was a mass media campaign focused on maternal health.10 In a second study in Egypt, Hutchinson and Meekers11 found a causal association between improved reproductive health outcomes and exposure to a multimedia communications campaign on birth spacing and family planning.
Given the growing evidence of a synergy between public health action and media attention to health challenges, media coverage of maternal health may differ in countries that are on different trajectories towards MDG 5. Our study compares media coverage of maternal health in three countries that are on different trajectories towards reaching MDG 5: Bangladesh, which is on track to achieve MDG 5; Rwanda, which is making progress but is not on track, and South Africa, which has made no progress. While national trajectory towards MDG 5 is shaped by complex factors (eg, available funds, political commitment, cultural and historical context and health infrastructure), media coverage of maternal health is one potential factor in how health policy agendas are set and funds are appropriated. Our study aimed to quantify, describe and analyse the content of national newspaper coverage of maternal health in these three countries in an effort to identify key similarities and differences in maternal health reporting. Our content analysis included an analysis of coverage of one key maternal health intervention: family planning.
Methods
Country selection
Country progress towards Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 (the child and maternal health goals) is tracked by the Countdown to 2015 initiative (http://www.countdown2015mnch.org/).2 The initiative categorises countries into four groups based on their progress towards MDGs 4 and 5: (A) on track; (B) some progress, but not on track; (C) insufficient progress; and (D) no progress.2 Based on the time frame that was feasible to conduct our study, we aimed to select one country from each of these four groups, based on the following inclusion and exclusion criteria that we applied to each group:
Inclusion criteria: We included only those countries with an English language newspaper published in print and online with complete searchable archives (to allow us to conduct a newspaper content analysis in English); of these countries, we chose the country with the highest baseline MMR in 1990 (since a key aim of the MDGs was to focus attention on the worst-performing countries in 1990).1
Exclusion criteria: We excluded countries on the World Bank ‘fragile situations’ list,12 as these countries face exceptional challenges in providing maternal health care13 and in publishing newspapers without interruption. We also excluded sparsely populated countries (defined as those having a population less than 10 million in 2008), since these countries have a major advantage in scaling up maternal health services compared to countries with large populations.
Bangladesh (on track), Rwanda (making progress but not on track) and South Africa (no progress) met all of these criteria. In the ‘insufficient progress’ category, no country met the criteria.
Below we briefly discuss each country in turn and delineate the possible social, political, historical, health infrastructure and financial factors that could contribute to the differences in progress besides media coverage.
Bangladesh is on track to meet MDG 5
Bangladesh is a low-income country that has faced periods of political turmoil and frequent natural disasters, with nearly a third (32%) of the population living poverty.14 In recent years, Bangladesh has had robust economic growth, averaging 6% annually between 2001 and 2012.14 Development has been swift in various social sectors, with increasing educational levels, especially for women.14 Bangladesh has also made remarkable progress towards achieving MDG 5. Between 1990 and 2010, the MMR fell from 800 to 240 deaths/100 000 live-births with an average annual decline of 5.9%.2 Given this rapid rate of decline, the country should reach its target MMR of under 200/100 000 live-births by 2015.2
This progress was achieved through factors such as increased access to family planning services, comprehensive emergency obstetric care, safe abortion practices and improved education of women.2 14 In addition, as shown in figure 1, Bangladesh is a major recipient of development assistance for health (DAH) for maternal health, and from 2007 to 2010 there was a sharp rise in DAH for maternal health channelled to the country.15 This rise in DAH may have contributed to its accelerated progress towards reaching MDG 5.
Rwanda has made progress but is not on track to meet MDG 5
The 1994 genocide in Rwanda destroyed the country's healthcare system and drove hundreds of medical workers into exile, which in turn affected maternal morbidity and mortality.16 Rwanda launched a community-wide health insurance scheme to address the health system crisis, supported by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM), and this scheme made care affordable for many women.16 In addition, voluntary community health workers (CHWs) trained in basic maternal health services are playing a crucial role in reducing Rwanda's MMR.16 17 The CHWs provide family planning education and services, and monitor pregnant women within their community.17 As shown in figure 1, from 2007 to 2009, there was a rise in DAH for maternal health channelled to Rwanda.15 This rise in DAH for maternal health might have potentially contributed to accelerating progress towards MDG 5. Between 1990 and 2010, the MMR in Rwanda fell from 910 to 340 deaths per 100 000 live-births, a decrease of over 50%, with an annual average fall of 4.9%.2 However, this rate of decline is not fast enough to meet MDG 5 by 2015.
South Africa has made no progress towards achieving MDG 5
The MMR in South Africa increased from 1990 to 2010, from 250 to 300 deaths/100 000 live-births.2 The country has made no progress towards achieving MDG 5 and will not achieve its 2015 target of 38 deaths per 100 000 live-births.18 The leading causes of maternal death in South Africa are direct obstetric causes and non-pregnancy-related causes, such as HIV/AIDS.18 HIV/AIDS increases the risk of maternal death 10-fold in South Africa.18
South Africa is an upper middle-income country and the country's constitution guarantees the right to healthcare.19 20 As shown in figure 1, while South Africa did receive DAH for maternal health over the time period of this study, nearly all of this was for family planning rather than for other maternal health services.15 Nevertheless, the nation's health system faces many challenges. These include lack of medical supplies and equipment; poor quality of care; lack of accountability of health professionals and public administrators; and a high burden of disease, particularly HIV infection.18 19 21 These challenges have been major obstacles to improving maternal health outcomes.
Newspaper selection
The media refers to channels of mass communication, including radio, television and newspapers. Table 2 shows the proportion of the population that has access to these three channels, based on data from recent demographic and health surveys in our three focus countries.22–25 We chose to study newspapers, rather than radio and television, since newspaper articles are much more likely to be archived and accessible to researchers. It would not have been possible for us to obtain complete archives of radio and television coverage in this study.
Table 2Proportion of population with access to three major media channels—radio, television and newspapers22–25
Bangladesh | 7 | 9 | 70 | 30 | 15 | 3 |
Rwanda | 76 | 60 | 28 | 2 | 28 | 2 |
South Africa | 80 | 69 | 75 | 41 | 54 | 23 |
Analysis of print media is a common approach in health research given the wide availability and accessibility of print archives.9 Previous research has suggested that while newspapers and television are likely to reach different audiences, their coverage of a particular health issue is similar. For example, one study of news coverage of alcohol found a very strong correlation between the number of alcohol-related television stories and the number of alcohol-related newspaper stories over a given time period.26 In addition, other studies show no difference in the perceived importance of an issue between different forms of media, such as newspaper versus television.27 Thus consumption of print media is likely to have similar weight to television in highlighting important health issues. Print media also has the advantage of being reflective of the political elite. While most of the population in Rwanda and Bangladesh access news information through television, consumers of print media are more likely to be educated, and could have political and financial resources at their disposal to invest in critical issues. Finally, print media in emerging economies is perceived as being a key tool for agenda-setting.28
For each country, we selected the highest circulation English language newspaper published in print and on the Internet. We selected English language newspapers in order to standardise the analysis and enable comprehensive coverage within the study's time period. In Bangladesh, while English language does not have an official status, it is widely used across government, media and education.29 In both Rwanda23 and South Africa,24 25 English is one of the official languages. To make the newspapers relatively comparable between countries, we selected a daily newspaper for each country. However, if the highest circulation English language newspaper was not a daily newspaper, we combined it with an affiliated sister newspaper in order to have at least 6–7 days per week of articles to analyse.
For Bangladesh, we selected The Daily Star (a daily newspaper). The Daily Star is seen as a high-quality leading English newspaper within Bangladesh.30 For Rwanda, we selected The New Times (published 6 days of the week, Monday through Saturday) and we included The New Times’ sister newspaper, Rwanda's The Sunday Times, for Sunday coverage. Throughout this research article, when we refer to The New Times/The Sunday Times, we are referring to Rwanda’s The New Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times. A Rwandan country-based analysis found that out of all print media and television within Rwanda, The New Times had the greatest diversity in sources as well as the largest number of news items.31 For South Africa, we selected Sunday Times (published Sundays, with a searchable archive that goes only as far back as 1 January 2008). To achieve 6 days per week of articles to analyse, we included the Sunday Times’ sister paper, The Times, which is published five times per week, Monday to Friday. The Times is fully archived from 1 October 2010 onwards. Throughout this research article, Sunday Times/The Times refers to the South Africa's Sunday Times and its sister paper The Times. Previous studies using the highest circulation Sunday Times have emphasised its influence in South African politics and highlighted it as a form of ‘elite or opinion-forming media’.32
Search strategy
We searched the electronic archives of each country's newspapers described above from 1 January 2008 to 31 March 2013. We chose a 1 January 2008 start date because the searchable archive of South Africa's Sunday Times only goes as far back as 1 January 2008. We searched for articles on maternal health (including family planning) using the strategy detailed in online supplementary appendix A. The collected articles were entered on an Excel spreadsheet.
Sampling strategy
We used a ‘constructed week’ sampling technique, in which “sample dates are stratified by day of the week to account for systematic variation due to day of the week.”33 Thus the final sample represents all 7 days of the week. This technique is more efficient, more accurate and less biased than random or consecutive day sampling of newspaper content.33 To construct comparable samples from each country, we created 12 constructed weeks per year per country between 1 October 2010 (the starting date of the archive of South Africa's The Times) and 31 March 2013. To construct 1 week from 1 month, we randomly selected one Monday from all four Mondays of that month, one Tuesday from all Tuesdays, one Wednesday from all Wednesdays, and so on. We included any article published during the days that were randomly selected. If no relevant maternal health articles were published, none were analysed for that date. As a result, there is variation in the number of articles sampled for analysis from each newspaper. Through this ‘constructed week’ sampling method, we sampled 75 articles from The Daily Star (Bangladesh), 64 articles from Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times and 51 articles from South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times—a total of 190 articles.
Analysis
Quantitative analysis
We quantified the number of articles on maternal health published annually for each newspaper. For the content analysis, we coded the number and nature of the articles, type of article (eg, news vs editorial), purpose, regional focus and length. We used z-test analysis for proportions with a Bonferroni adjustment to compare the three countries’ newspapers.
Qualitative framework analysis
We used the context of ‘agenda-setting’8 to identify the three main frameworks used to present maternal health issues: (A) ‘rights-based’ frameworks describing maternal health as a human right;7 (B) ‘policy-based’ frameworks presenting maternal health challenges as part of economic or social development with specific policy solutions; and (C) frameworks discussing maternal health as an ‘ethical’ or ‘moral’ issue.8 We quantified the frequency of these frameworks in each newspaper, whether written directly by the journalist or quoted from an interview. We coded for narrative elements, story tone (negative, neutral, positive, or mixed), protagonist, antagonist and story dimensions (statistics, facts, aetiologies); solutions; and target audience. We also assessed the frequency of articles covering roundtables, seminars or discussions about maternal health issues that were hosted by the newspaper or created in collaboration with other organisations. Finally, we noted whether articles directly mentioned MDG 5 in their analysis of maternal health.
Assessment of reliability
Two coders (FG and EK) developed the codebook from relevant existing work,8 supplemented with additional themes that emerged from the three newspapers (see online supplementary appendix B). We followed an iterative process34 of reading randomly selected articles, assessing themes and adjusting the codebook until we achieved inter-rater reliability (Cohen's κ >0.82). All articles were recoded using the finalised codebook.
Results
Volume and frequency of articles
From 1 January 2008 to 31 March 2013, The Daily Star (Bangladesh) published 579 articles on maternal health, compared to 342 articles in Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times and 253 in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times. The rate of increase in the number of maternal health articles published annually also differed markedly between the newspapers (figure 2). In Bangladesh’s The Daily Star, the number of articles on maternal health rose from only four articles in 2008 to 217 articles in 2012. Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times also sharply increased its coverage of maternal health, from 15 articles in 2008 to 158 articles in 2012. South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times had the slowest rate of increase, from 31 articles in 2008 to 69 articles in 2012.
Quantitative and qualitative content analysis
Below are the results of our analysis of articles sampled through a constructed-week sampling method. The timeframe for the analysis was 1 October 2010 to 31 March 2013.
Article type
A significantly higher proportion of the maternal health articles in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times and Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times were news coverage of specific events, meetings and conferences (88% and 86% of articles from the two newspapers, respectively, compared to 48% of articles in Bangladesh's The Daily Star (p<0.05; table 3)). None of the articles on maternal health in the South African and Rwandan papers were in-depth reports. In comparison, about 1 of every 7 (13%) maternal health articles published in Bangladesh's paper involved in-depth coverage of maternal health issues, and were usually published in the paper's health section (a section called ‘Star Health’).
Table 3Quantitative analysis of article type, purpose, focus country and story length in articles related to MDG 5 in The Daily Star (Bangladesh), The New Times/The Sunday Times (Rwanda) and Sunday Times/The Times (South Africa)
Article type | ||||||
News* | 36 | 48 | 55 | 86 | 45 | 88 |
Letters or Op-Eds* | 28 | 37 | 5 | 8 | 6 | 12 |
Health section | 10 | 13 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Editorial | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Purpose | ||||||
Advocacy/awareness* | 46 | 61 | 25 | 39 | 20 | 39 |
Event coverage | 26 | 35 | 38 | 59 | 29 | 57 |
Other | 3 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4 |
Focus country | ||||||
Own country* | 70 | 93 | 58 | 91 | 30 | 59 |
Other country | 5 | 7 | 6 | 9 | 21 | 41 |
Story length | ||||||
0–500 words | 52 | 69 | 44 | 69 | 33 | 65 |
501–1000 words | 12 | 16 | 17 | 27 | 16 | 31 |
1001+ words | 11 | 15 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 4 |
MDG 5 explicitly mentioned in the article* | 27 | 36 | 6 | 9 | 0 | 0 |
Percentages do not always add up to 100, due to rounding.
*p<0.05.
MDG 5, Millennium Development Goal 5.
About 4 of every 10 (37%) maternal health articles published in Bangladesh's The Daily Star were opinion-based articles (letters, opinions and Op-Eds), a significantly higher proportion than the articles in Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times (8%) or South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times (12%) (p<0.05; table 3). Opinion-based articles in The Daily Star often included strong opinions that supported or challenged the government's stance on particular policies, and shaped perceptions of solutions. For example, a letter writer in The Daily Star called for action on MDG 5:
…If we want to achieve the MDG-5 by the stipulated time, the government, national and international organisations including UN organisations should come forward and work hard together and invest in safe motherhood programmes to drastically reduce the rate of maternal deaths.35
Story purpose
A significantly greater proportion of maternal articles in The Daily Star were advocating for or raising awareness of maternal health (61%) than in Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times (39%) and South Africa's The Sunday Times/The Times (39%) (p<0.05; table 3).
Regional focus
The Daily Star and Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times had a significantly higher proportion of articles that emphasised local rather than international maternal health issues (93% and 91%, respectively), compared to South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times (59%) (p<0.05; table 3). In comparison, about 4 of every 10 (41%) maternal health articles in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times focused on other countries; for example, in 2012, about 1 of every 5 (22%) maternal and reproductive health articles covered US election debates on abortion and contraception.
Article length
There was no significant difference in the length of the articles between the three sampled newspapers.
MDG 5
Over one third (36%) of articles from Bangladesh's The Daily Star explicitly discussed MDG 5 in the context of improving maternal health, compared to just 9% of articles from Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times and no articles in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times (p<0.05; table 3).
Qualitative framework analysis
Framing
Most maternal health articles in Bangladesh's The Daily Star and Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times used rights-based or policy-based framing (83% and 69%, respectively). In contrast, only a minority of articles (41%) in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times used such framing (table 4). The quotation below gives an example of rights-based framing, from journalist Doreen Umutesi in Rwanda’s The New Times:
…with the establishment of reproductive health services that are youth-friendly, Rwanda is venturing into a path that will see the creation of a generation that is informed about their reproductive health rights.36
Table 4Qualitative analysis of the main theme, story tone, proponent and plan of action in articles related to MDG 5 in The Daily Star (Bangladesh), The New Times/The Sunday Times (Rwanda) and Sunday Times/The Times (South Africa)
Main theme | ||||||
Human rights frames | 29 | 39 | 18 | 28 | 13 | 25 |
Policy-based frames | 33 | 44 | 26 | 41 | 8 | 16 |
Moral or ethical frames | 11 | 15 | 13 | 20 | 20 | 39 |
Economic | 2 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 8 |
Personal/heroic | 0 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 8 |
Other theme | 0 | 0 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 4 |
Story tone | ||||||
Positive | 32 | 43 | 25 | 39 | 7 | 14 |
Negative | 22 | 29 | 15 | 23 | 32 | 63 |
Mixed | 16 | 21 | 16 | 25 | 8 | 15 |
Neutral | 5 | 7 | 8 | 1 | 4 | 8 |
Proponent* | ||||||
Government | 27 | 36 | 35 | 55 | 11 | 22 |
Organisation, the UN, the WHO | 23 | 31 | 18 | 28 | 5 | 10 |
Health professional | 5 | 7 | 14 | 22 | 4 | 8 |
Activist | 5 | 7 | 8 | 13 | 5 | 10 |
Patient | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 9 | 18 |
Plan of action* | ||||||
Political will | 49 | 65 | 20 | 31 | 7 | 14 |
Increase funding | 44 | 59 | 26 | 41 | 13 | 25 |
Create awareness | 28 | 37 | 24 | 38 | 5 | 10 |
*Categories are not mutually exclusive and therefore percentages can add up to more or less than 100%.
MDG 5, Millennium Development Goal 5; UN, United Nations.
Policy-based framing focused on legislative and programmatic initiatives. For example, Dr Kashfia Keya wrote in The Daily Star:
Bangladesh has made remarkable achievements in reproductive health and reducing maternal mortality…however, addressing workforce need is critical, with particular attention to a defined role for midwives in regulation, education and deployment.37
South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times often used moral or ethical framing (39% of articles); such framing was less common in The Daily Star (15% of articles) and Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times (20% of articles) (table 4). For example, an article in South Africa’s Sunday Times described moral shaming of nurses who did not protect the health of patients:
South African nurses found guilty of offences such as fraud, assaulting patients, and giving them the wrong medicines, are, for the first time, being named and shamed…at least 21 (cases) involved negligence in treating women in labour.38
Story tone
Nearly two-thirds (63%) of South Africa’s Sunday Times/The Times maternal health articles had a negative tone compared to 29% of The Daily Star articles and 23% of Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times articles (table 4).
Protagonists
The Daily Star and Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times frequently cited prominent global organisations such as the UN or WHO or government officials as key advocates for maternal health issues (table 4). For example, an article in Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times linked the Rwandan president, President Kagame, and Rwandan policy to the global movement for maternal health:
President Kagame has taken the lead…at the launch of the United Nations Secretary General's Global Strategy on Women's and Children's Health, he committed to increasing health sector spending from 10.9% to 15% by 2012. The setting of strong objectives and tangible deadlines is crucial for the improvement of health outcomes for women and children.39
South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times was less likely to identify high-profile protagonists at the international level and more likely to mention a lower profile protagonist for maternal health, usually as part of a local or national programme (table 4).
Panel discussions
Unlike the South African and Rwandan newspapers that we analysed, Bangladesh’s The Daily Star frequently organises roundtables, seminars and discussions with experts and organisations to raise awareness of important national issues,40 including maternal health. Three per cent of articles we sampled from The Daily Star on maternal health reported on these special roundtables, seminars and discussions.
Causes of maternal deaths
Across all three newspapers, complications of pregnancy and childbirth and poor access to healthcare were the most commonly identified causes of maternal mortality (table 5).
Table 5Qualitative analysis of articles on maternal health and family planning in The Daily Star (Bangladesh), The New Times/The Sunday Times (Rwanda) and Sunday Times/The Times (South Africa)
Causes of high maternal mortality ratio* | ||||||
Complications of pregnancy and childbirth | 39 | 52 | 31 | 48 | 12 | 24 |
Lack of access to healthcare services | 22 | 29 | 10 | 16 | 6 | 12 |
Early childbearing | 7 | 9 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Unsafe abortion | 3 | 4 | 5 | 8 | 3 | 6 |
Indirect causes | 0 | 0 | 5 | 8 | 3 | 6 |
Interventions to improve maternal health* | ||||||
Skilled care at birth | 34 | 45 | 28 | 44 | 6 | 12 |
Reproductive healthcare | 17 | 23 | 12 | 19 | 5 | 10 |
Health system strengthening | 17 | 23 | 21 | 33 | 6 | 12 |
Empowerment of women | 12 | 16 | 5 | 8 | 4 | 8 |
Ending child marriage | 8 | 11 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Access to safe abortion | 2 | 3 | 6 | 9 | 2 | 4 |
Need for family planning* | ||||||
Slowing population growth | 18 | 24 | 9 | 14 | 4 | 8 |
Preventing pregnancy-related risks | 12 | 16 | 11 | 17 | 2 | 4 |
Reducing adolescent pregnancies | 11 | 15 | 13 | 20 | 10 | 20 |
Helping to prevent HIV/AIDS | 0 | 0 | 7 | 11 | 2 | 4 |
Barriers to family planning* | ||||||
Lack of advocacy and awareness | 26 | 35 | 11 | 17 | 11 | 22 |
Financial barriers to accessing family planning | 16 | 21 | 7 | 11 | 3 | 6 |
Lack of political will/lack of public funding | 16 | 21 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 6 |
Religious/cultural leaders or beliefs | 2 | 3 | 8 | 13 | 6 | 12 |
Causes of maternal deaths/lack of progress on MDG 5* | ||||||
Lack of funding or other resources | 9 | 12 | 8 | 13 | 6 | 12 |
Lack of awareness | 5 | 7 | 9 | 14 | 4 | 8 |
Lack of political will | 5 | 7 | 6 | 9 | 6 | 12 |
Causes of improved maternal health/positive progress on MDG 5* | ||||||
Political will | 14 | 19 | 9 | 14 | 0 | 0 |
Increased funding | 11 | 15 | 17 | 27 | 0 | 0 |
Creating awareness | 11 | 15 | 18 | 28 | 0 | 0 |
*Categories are not mutually exclusive and therefore percentages can add up to more or less than 100%.
MDG 5, Millennium Development Goal 5.
Solutions for improving maternal health
Increasing skilled attendance at birth and improving access to reproductive healthcare were the most commonly mentioned interventions across all three newspapers.
Family planning
Articles about family planning in The Daily Star were more likely than those in the other two newspapers to mention family planning as a method to slow population growth rather than as a means to improve maternal health (table 5):
The government will recruit around 13,000 field-level officials in the family planning department with a view to address rise in population, a major concern of the country…41
In contrast, both Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times and South Africa’s Sunday Times/The Times were more likely to emphasise family planning as a means to reduce adolescent pregnancy. For example, in an article from Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times discussing family planning and adolescent health, Victoria Akyeampong, UN Population Fund (UNFPA) Country Director, commented:
…the issue of adolescent teenage pregnancies cannot be ignored and, therefore, it is very important that we target problems that address sexuality needs among Rwanda's youth.36
In Rwanda, family planning was also discussed in the context of abortion, with a spike in abortion-related articles in 2012. About 1 of every 6 (15%) maternal health articles published in 2012 from Rwanda’s The New Times/The Sunday Times discussed abortion, such as a statement from Chantal Umuhoza, the Coordinator of Rwanda's Safe Abortion Action Fund:
We should have a safe legal environment for safe abortion…It's every woman's right to terminate a pregnancy when they decide to.42
Barriers
All three newspapers published articles that mentioned limited awareness, poor advocacy and financial barriers as the main obstacles to accessing family planning (table 5).
Discussion
Our study of newspaper of maternal health in three countries that have made varying progress towards MDG 5—Bangladesh (on track), Rwanda (making progress, but not on track) and South Africa (no progress)—found several important differences between each country’s newspapers in the quantity and content of articles on maternal health. In particular, Bangladesh's newspaper published articles on maternal health more frequently than the other newspapers, and these articles were more likely to be in-depth reports and opinion-based articles (letters, opinions and Op-Eds). Our findings suggest that there is an association between the amount and type of media coverage of maternal health and progress on MDG 5. However, this was a cross-sectional study and therefore we cannot infer causality.
Differences in volume and frequency of publication
The Daily Star of Bangladesh had the greatest volume and frequency of maternal health reporting during the study period, while South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times had the lowest volume and frequency of maternal health coverage. Prior research has shown that the volume of media coverage on a health issue (eg, infectious disease or tobacco control) is correlated with the likelihood of relevant policy adoption.8 43 In these studies, however, causality is hard to prove and even if the relationship were causal, the direction of the causality is unclear—higher coverage could stimulate policy action or policy action could lead to higher media coverage.8 43 Given Bangladesh’s greater progress on MDG 5, our study suggests an association between the volume of newspaper coverage on maternal health issues and a country's trajectory towards MDG 5, though causality cannot be inferred.
While we cannot determine the nature of the association, one hypothesis is that the differences between each country's newspapers in their reporting on maternal health may reflect differences in the political and financial resources allocated to achieving MDG 5 between each country. In recent years, there has been a rise in global financial resources and political attention given to achieving MDG 5, with a focus mainly on low-income countries.1 44 One major initiative, The Global Strategy for Women's and Children's Health, launched in 2010, has successfully mobilised high level political attention and significant financial and policy commitments for MDGs 4 and 5.1 44 The Global Strategy focuses on the 49 lowest-income countries, including Rwanda and Bangladesh, to ensure more investment in the health of women and children, thereby putting maternal health at the top of the political agenda in those priority countries.1 44 The Global Strategy also suggests that middle-income countries could mobilise enough domestic resources to finance their own maternal health needs.1 South Africa is an upper middle-income country,19 and thus is not on the priority list. Therefore, as shown in figure 1, the rise in DAH for maternal health directed towards Bangladesh and Rwanda could have played a role in their progress towards MDG 5. The focus of global initiatives on priority low-income countries may have influenced newspaper coverage of maternal health in Bangladesh and Rwanda, such as through greater reporting of international actors working in-country (eg, the WHO and the UN), or an increase in reporting of the relationship between global and national maternal health targets.
The prioritisation of low-income countries by global maternal health initiatives, such as The Global Strategy's focus on Bangladesh and Rwanda but not on South Africa, could have contributed to several important differences between each country’s newspapers in the quantity and content of articles on maternal health. We found that from 2008 to 2012 there was a sharp increase in the annual number of articles published about maternal health in Bangladesh's The Daily Star and Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times, with a much smaller rate of increase in South Africa’s Sunday Times/The Times. The Daily Star and The New Times/The Sunday Times were more likely to include a higher profile protagonist (eg, prominent national political leaders, activists, WHO, UNFPA) than the Sunday Times/The Times. The Sunday Times/The Times often had a lower profile protagonist for maternal health, usually as part of a local or national programme, and was less likely to have a broader theme tying into the global MDGs movement. Furthermore, Bangladesh's The Daily Star and Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times were more likely than South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times to explicitly discuss the connection between MDG 5 and improving maternal health within the country context; they were also more likely to directly mention a key cause of maternal mortality, or a proposed solution for maternal health.
Differences in in-depth reporting on maternal health
In-depth, evidence-based reporting of maternal health that is deeply researched can help to promote public health awareness and education, community mobilisation and political accountability for maternal health.45 It is therefore noteworthy that only Bangladesh's paper, The Daily Star, had any in-depth reporting at all (about 1 of every 7 articles were in-depth reports) and had the highest proportion of stories advocating for or raising awareness of maternal health. Most articles on maternal health in Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times and South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times were short reports of events (eg, press conferences or meetings) or press releases published without additional investigation. A previous qualitative study of six ‘media practitioners’ (reporters, editors, producers and media managers) and six civil society representatives (activists, lawyers, students and religious representatives) in South Africa found that newspapers commonly based stories just on press releases.46 The key informants expressed concerns about South African media “regurgitating press releases without doing additional research or interviews.”46 One key informant said: “We also rely too much on Google, and journalists are lacking basic knowledge. We follow Sapa (The South African Press Association), one another on Twitter…so we often make the same mistakes as one another.”46
The Daily Star exemplified in-depth coverage by initiating investigative reporting and roundtable forums featuring different organisations and experts. Such public discussion bridges potential gaps in knowledge, allows active promotion of maternal health concerns and creates a favourable environment for strong maternal health policymaking. By using minimal investigative reporting and neglecting to spearhead public discussions, The New Times/The Sunday Times and Sunday Times/The Times missed an opportunity for greater impact.
Differences in types of articles
The proportion of articles on maternal health that were opinion-based was highest in Bangladesh's The Daily Star (37%), followed by South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times (12%) and then Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times (8%). Opinion-based articles provide a useful measure of public attitudes on social issues.47 In our sampled newspapers, opinion-based articles contained strong viewpoints, challenging or supporting the government's motivation for particular policy initiatives and shaping perceptions of solutions. While opinion-based articles are primarily written by authors who have enough knowledge to formulate a written response to particular issues, they can still provide a useful measure of general public attitudes on those issues.47
Our study did not set out to examine whether opinion-based articles influenced policy in Bangladesh. However, at least in theory, these types of articles could influence the public discourse on a health issue in ways that could reach health policymakers and possibly affect their decision-making. For example, opinion-based articles praising national progress on maternal health could have a ‘positive feedback’ effect, persuading policy makers to emphasise maternal health over other issues. Negative pieces that highlight preventable maternal deaths could exert bottom-up pressure on political leaders by raising awareness of the issues and informing officials to act. By swaying public opinion through opinion-based articles, these writers may have contributed to the discussion on maternal health in Bangladesh.
Recent news events relevant to maternal health often led to publication of letters to the editor. For example, in June 2012, a new abortion law came into effect in Rwanda as part of a larger review of Rwanda's penal code.48 The process of legalising safe abortion was a key national event that stimulated much media coverage; indeed, the topic of legalised abortion accounted for 15% of MDG 5-related articles published in The New Times/The Sunday Times during 2012. These letters are expressions of responses from members of the general public who opposed or supported the passage of such legislation. The New Times/The Sunday Times played a critical role in public deliberation of the issues by publishing both views in favour of and against safe abortion laws. This form of active media facilitation may have promoted greater public engagement with maternal health issues relevant to current affairs.
Differences in framing
A higher proportion of maternal health articles from Bangladesh's The Daily Star and Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times used rights-based or policy-based frames. Prior research on the interaction between media reporting and policymaking found that rights-based and policy-based media frames are associated with policy action.7 8 49 Policy-based frames describe a health issue within its broader social, economic and national context, increasing readers’ sense of social responsibility and desire for policy action.49 Rights-based framing of maternal health can be a powerful stimulus for action, as this type of framing demands accountability for maternal deaths at the national level.7 In a recent case in Uganda, a well organised and active coalition of non-governmental organisations (NGOs, called the Coalition to Stop Maternal Mortality in Uganda sued the government over the deaths of two women during childbirth, deaths that could have been averted, citing a violation of their constitutional right to health.50 The NGOs drew significant public attention to the issue of avertable maternal deaths by arguing that the right to health guarantees access to quality care, and that negligence by Ugandan authorities causes thousands of maternal deaths annually.50 While a causal link cannot be proven from our study, it is possible that the rights-based and policy-based framing of articles in The Daily Star and The New Times/The Sunday Times played a similar role in stimulating action on MDG 5.
South Africa's constitution guarantees the right to healthcare,19 20 and so it is surprising that many articles on maternal health in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times framed their stories through a moral/ethical framing (39%) rather than primarily favouring a human rights lens (only 41%), particularly when covering teen pregnancy and hospital scandals. Previous studies have shown that moral/ethical framing is less likely than rights-based framing to generate significant funding and attention for neglected health issues.8 These framing differences may have affected the political attention and financial resources directed to maternal health in each country—though again, this conclusion cannot be drawn from a cross-sectional study such as ours.
Differences in tone
Almost two thirds of articles on maternal health in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times had a negative tone, focusing on healthcare scandals, failed abortions and poorly funded hospitals. Such a negative tone, while highlighting important public health concerns, may deter individual citizen action by portraying it as an ‘unsolvable problem’.51 This tone may also discourage women from seeking reproductive or maternal healthcare, such as by frightening women about the poor quality of maternal health services. Prior research has shown that while negatively framed or ‘fear-framed’ issues initiate greater attention and potential for behaviour change, they can impair decisive action to reduce dangerous outcomes, particularly if no clear and effective solution is provided or if subjects feel that they have no control over preventing a negative outcome.52 More balanced reporting can emphasise priority issues while still encouraging safe maternal and reproductive health practices.
Differences in context
All three newspapers connected specific national concerns to maternal health interventions. Bangladesh, the world's most densely populated country,14 has long been concerned by its rapid population growth. Bangladesh's The Daily Star often discussed family planning in the context of slowing population growth. In comparison, The New Times/The Sunday Times of Rwanda and Sunday Times/The Times of South Africa emphasised family planning to reduce adolescent pregnancy, a significant concern in these two countries. As mentioned previously, The New Times/The Sunday Times also frequently published on abortion, stimulated by the recent passage of a safe abortion law in 2012.48 Our results suggest that the solutions that are presented for solving health problems across different newspapers are context-dependent and country-dependent.
Conclusions and policy implications
Our study suggests that there may be a link between a country's progress towards MDG 5 and the frequency, tone and content of its newspaper coverage of maternal health. Given previous research showing an association between media coverage of a global health problem and policy attention towards that problem, it is possible that greater media attention towards maternal health could be linked with maternal health being positioned higher on the agenda for policy action.
The differences in reporting highlighted by our study, such as the use of policy-based framing and opinion-based articles, could potentially be valuable to those who are trying to engage the media in maternal survival efforts. The Daily Star of Bangladesh has been able to highlight maternal health issues by organising seminars, discussions and roundtables, which are then covered in the newspaper—a strategy that could be valuable for other countries to replicate. In addition, the way in which news articles are framed can influence whether policymakers take action. Rights-based and policy-based framing is likely to be more effective than moral or ethical framing at stimulating government action, as it fosters accountability and can help to shift perceptions of a health issue among the general public and policymakers. Opinion-based articles written by citizens, organisations and civil society groups that draw attention to maternal deaths and propose potential solutions can create a public discourse that is conducive to policy action. Lastly, as seen with the possible link between the UN's Global Strategy for Women's and Children's Health and national action on maternal health in Rwanda and Bangladesh, aligning national and global efforts while reporting on maternal health issues could catalyse solidarity, attention, funding and progress towards MDG 5.
It is unclear to what extent these findings may be generalisable to other settings, given the importance of country context in both improving maternal health and in media representations of health. Nevertheless, we included three countries from three different categories in the Countdown to 2015 report (on track; some progress, but not on track; and no progress). The differences that we found between Bangladesh, Rwanda and South Africa might also be seen between three other countries that come from these three different category groupings.
Next steps
The limitations of our study could be addressed by future research that examines a broader range of media, including native language newspapers, radio and television, and research that examines the influence of media coverage of maternal health on actual maternal health policies. Our next study will be a qualitative study of reporters and editors from The Daily Star, The New Times/The Sunday Times and Sunday Times/The Times—the public opinion ‘gate-keepers’53—to explore their views on the facilitators and barriers to covering maternal health stories.
The authors thank John Ziegler (University of California, San Francisco; UCSF), and Megan Tan (Stanford University) for their thoughtful comments and review of an early draft of this manuscript; Wayne Enanoria (UCSF) for providing assistance in the statistical analysis of our study; Nancy Fullman (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation) for providing us the data on development assistance for maternal health for Bangladesh, Rwanda and South Africa; and the two external peer reviewers, Calistus Wilunda (School of Public Health, Kyoto University, Japan) and Cynthia Summers, (Guttmacher Institute, USA), for their valuable comments on two earlier versions of this paper.
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Abstract
Objective
To examine newspaper coverage of maternal health in three countries that have made varying progress towards Millennium Development Goal 5 (MDG 5): Bangladesh (on track), Rwanda (making progress, but not on track) and South Africa (no progress).
Design
We analysed each country's leading national English-language newspaper: Bangladesh's The Daily Star, Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times, and South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times. We quantified the number of maternal health articles published from 1 January 2008 to 31 March 2013. We conducted a content analysis of subset of 190 articles published from 1 October 2010 to 31 March 2013.
Results
Bangladesh's The Daily Star published 579 articles related to maternal health from 1 January 2008 to 31 March 2013, compared to 342 in Rwanda's The New Times/The Sunday Times and 253 in South Africa's Sunday Times/The Times over the same time period. The Daily Star had the highest proportion of stories advocating for or raising awareness of maternal health. Most maternal health articles in The Daily Star (83%) and The New Times/The Sunday Times (69%) used a ‘human-rights’ or ‘policy-based’ frame compared to 41% of articles from Sunday Times/The Times.
Conclusions
In the three countries included in this study, which are on different trajectories towards MDG 5, there were differences in the frequency, tone and content of their newspaper coverage of maternal health. However, no causal conclusions can be drawn about this association between progress on MDG 5 and the amount and type of media coverage of maternal health.
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Details
1 University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
2 Department of Internal Medicine-Pediatrics, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
3 Department of Policy, California Association of Food Banks, Oakland, California, USA
4 Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA