Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan
Can mass public health messages change behavior during a crisis? This paper assesses the impact of a COVID-19 focused text-messaging campaign launched in May 2020 with the Ministry of Health and Social Protection of Tajikistan to encourage complian...
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2021
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okr-10986-361962021-08-27T05:10:32Z Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan Seitz, William CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY MOBILE ENGAGEMENT RISK REDUCTION Can mass public health messages change behavior during a crisis? This paper assesses the impact of a COVID-19 focused text-messaging campaign launched in May 2020 with the Ministry of Health and Social Protection of Tajikistan to encourage compliance with risk reduction measures. The initiative sent a series of informational messages to about 5.5 million mobile phone subscribers and reached at least one member of more than 90 percent of the country’s households. An individual fixed effects estimator is used to measure changes in reported behavior after a respondent lists text messages as a primary source of information about COVID-19, or alternatively when reporting an official text message in the past week. Listing text messaging as a primary source of information increased the number of reported behaviors by 0.15 units (p = 0.000) and receiving an official text message in the past week increased the number by 0.47 units (p = 0.000). These effects were driven by more positive responses for wearing masks, reducing visits with friends and relatives, reducing travel, practicing safer greetings (such as fewer handshakes), and safety-related changes at work. The results suggest that text messaging–based public health messaging was a cost-effective means of increasing awareness in a large and geographically dispersed audience during the COVID-19 pandemic and that the program led to an increase in self-reported risk reducing behaviors. 2021-08-26T14:54:38Z 2021-08-26T14:54:38Z 2021-08 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/424981629731059341/Mass-Messaging-and-Health-Risk-Reduction-Evidence-from-COVID-19-Text-Messages-in-Tajikistan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36196 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9755 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Europe and Central Asia Tajikistan |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY MOBILE ENGAGEMENT RISK REDUCTION |
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CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY MOBILE ENGAGEMENT RISK REDUCTION Seitz, William Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia Tajikistan |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9755 |
description |
Can mass public health messages change
behavior during a crisis? This paper assesses the impact of
a COVID-19 focused text-messaging campaign launched in May
2020 with the Ministry of Health and Social Protection of
Tajikistan to encourage compliance with risk reduction
measures. The initiative sent a series of informational
messages to about 5.5 million mobile phone subscribers and
reached at least one member of more than 90 percent of the
country’s households. An individual fixed effects estimator
is used to measure changes in reported behavior after a
respondent lists text messages as a primary source of
information about COVID-19, or alternatively when reporting
an official text message in the past week. Listing text
messaging as a primary source of information increased the
number of reported behaviors by 0.15 units (p = 0.000) and
receiving an official text message in the past week
increased the number by 0.47 units (p = 0.000). These
effects were driven by more positive responses for wearing
masks, reducing visits with friends and relatives, reducing
travel, practicing safer greetings (such as fewer
handshakes), and safety-related changes at work. The results
suggest that text messaging–based public health messaging
was a cost-effective means of increasing awareness in a
large and geographically dispersed audience during the
COVID-19 pandemic and that the program led to an increase in
self-reported risk reducing behaviors. |
format |
Working Paper |
author |
Seitz, William |
author_facet |
Seitz, William |
author_sort |
Seitz, William |
title |
Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan |
title_short |
Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan |
title_full |
Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan |
title_fullStr |
Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mass Messaging and Health Risk Reduction : Evidence from COVID-19 Text Messages in Tajikistan |
title_sort |
mass messaging and health risk reduction : evidence from covid-19 text messages in tajikistan |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/424981629731059341/Mass-Messaging-and-Health-Risk-Reduction-Evidence-from-COVID-19-Text-Messages-in-Tajikistan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36196 |
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1764484761179389952 |