Social marketing of water and sanitation products: a systematic review of peer-reviewed literature.

Like commercial marketing, social marketing uses the 4 "Ps" and seeks exchange of value between the marketer and consumer. Behaviors such as handwashing, and products such as those for oral rehydration treatment (ORT), can be marketed like commercial products in developing countries. Although social marketing in these areas is growing, there has been no systematic review of the current state of practice, research and evaluation. We searched the literature for published peer-reviewed studies available through major online publication databases. We identified manuscripts in the health, social science, and business literature on social marketing that used at least one of the 4 Ps of marketing and had a behavioral objective targeting the behaviors or products related to improving water and sanitation. We developed formalized decision rules and applied them in identifying articles for review. We initially identified 117 articles and reviewed a final set of 32 that met our criteria. Social marketing is a widespread strategy. Marketing efforts have created high levels of awareness of health threats and solutions, including behavior change and socially marketed products. There is widespread use of the 4 Ps of marketing, with price interventions being the least common. Evaluations show consistent improvements in behavioral mediators but mixed results in behavior change. Interventions have successfully used social marketing following widely recommended strategies. Future evaluations need to focus on mediators that explain successful behavior change in order to identify best practices and improve future programs. More rigorous evaluations including quasi-experimental designs and randomized trials are needed. More consistent reporting of evaluation results that permits meta-analysis of effects is needed.

[1]  E. W. Mitchell,et al.  A Meta-Analysis of the Effect of Mediated Health Communication Campaigns on Behavior Change in the United States , 2004, Journal of health communication.

[2]  C. Bellamy The State of the World's Children 1998: Focus on Nutrition. , 1998 .

[3]  Lene Jensen,et al.  Guidelines for assessing the enabling environment conditions for large scale, effective and sustainable hand washing with soap projects , 2008 .

[4]  J. Pinfold,et al.  Measuring the effect of a hygiene behaviour intervention by indicators of behaviour and diarrhoeal disease. , 1996, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[5]  R. Agwanda,et al.  Oral rehydration therapy and social marketing in rural Kenya. , 1990, Social science & medicine.

[6]  Philip Kotler,et al.  Social Marketing: Influencing Behaviors for Good , 1989 .

[7]  S. Luby,et al.  Combining drinking water treatment and hand washing for diarrhoea prevention, a cluster randomised controlled trial , 2006, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[8]  S. Luby,et al.  Effect of intensive handwashing promotion on childhood diarrhea in high-risk communities in Pakistan: a randomized controlled trial. , 2004, JAMA.

[9]  L. Hutwagner,et al.  Diarrhoea prevention in Bolivia through point-of-use water treatment and safe storage: a promising new strategy , 1999, Epidemiology and Infection.

[10]  C. Super,et al.  A longitudinal study of the impact of behavioural change intervention on cleanliness, diarrhoeal morbidity and growth of children in rural Bangladesh. , 1993, Social science & medicine.

[11]  A. Dongre,et al.  Effect of use of socially marketed faucet fitted earthen vessel/sodium hypochlorite solution on diarrhea prevention at household level in rural India , 2008 .

[12]  G. Hastings,et al.  What Is and What Is Not Social Marketing: The Challenge of Reviewing the Evidence , 2005 .

[13]  John Painter,et al.  Effect of handwashing on child health: a randomised controlled trial , 2005, The Lancet.

[14]  J. Bresee,et al.  Point-of-use water treatment and use among mothers in Malawi. , 2007, Emerging infectious diseases.

[15]  Katherine L. Dickinson,et al.  Shame or subsidy revisited: social mobilization for sanitation in Orissa, India. , 2009, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[16]  R. Quick,et al.  Diarrhea prevention in people living with HIV: an evaluation of a point-of-use water quality intervention in Lagos, Nigeria , 2011, AIDS care.

[17]  S. Cousens,et al.  Evidence of behaviour change following a hygiene promotion programme in Burkina Faso. , 2001, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[18]  I. Azam,et al.  Evaluation of a water, sanitation, and hygiene education intervention on diarrhoea in northern Pakistan. , 2003, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[19]  C. Dunston,et al.  Collaboration, cholera, and cyclones: a project to improve point-of-use water quality in Madagascar. , 2001, American journal of public health.

[20]  R. Quick,et al.  Adoption of safe water behaviors in Zambia: comparing educational and motivational approaches. , 2000, Education for health.

[21]  J. Pinfold Analysis of different communication channels for promoting hygiene behaviour. , 1999, Health education research.

[22]  James Hersey,et al.  Public health branding : applying marketing for social change , 2007 .

[23]  Neil H. Borden,et al.  The Concept of the Marketing Mix , 1964 .

[24]  R. Quick,et al.  Challenges in implementing a point-of-use water quality intervention in rural Kenya. , 2001, American journal of public health.

[25]  R. Quick,et al.  Diarrhoea prevention in a high-risk rural Kenyan population through point-of-use chlorination, safe water storage, sanitation, and rainwater harvesting , 2008, Epidemiology and Infection.

[26]  Lori Hutwagner,et al.  Diarrhea prevention through household-level water disinfection and safe storage in Zambia. , 2002, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[27]  R. Quick,et al.  Sustained high levels of stored drinking water treatment and retention of hand-washing knowledge in rural Kenyan households following a clinic-based intervention , 2006, Epidemiology and Infection.

[28]  R. Quick,et al.  Evaluation of a novel drinking water treatment and storage intervention in Nicaragua. , 1998, Revista panamericana de salud publica = Pan American journal of public health.

[29]  Jonathan L. Blitstein,et al.  Systematic Review of Public Health Branding , 2008, Journal of health communication.

[30]  C. Ramsay,et al.  Mass media interventions: effects on health services utilisation. , 2002, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[31]  Siri Wood,et al.  Understanding why women adopt and sustain home water treatment: insights from the Malawi antenatal care program. , 2012, Social science & medicine.

[32]  B. Obrist,et al.  Integrating local and biomedical knowledge and communication: experiences from KINET project in Southern Tanzania , 2005 .

[33]  B. B. Jensen,et al.  The potential of schoolchildren as health change agents in rural western Kenya. , 2005, Social science & medicine.

[34]  R. Quick,et al.  Increasing equity of access to point-of-use water treatment products through social marketing and entrepreneurship: a case study in western Kenya. , 2009, Journal of water and health.

[35]  S. Luby,et al.  Delayed effectiveness of home-based interventions in reducing childhood diarrhea, Karachi, Pakistan. , 2004, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[36]  M. Biggerstaff,et al.  Diarrhea prevention in a Kenyan school through the use of a simple safe water and hygiene intervention. , 2007, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[37]  R. Quick,et al.  Social Marketing and Motivational Interviewing as Community Interventions for Safe Water Behaviors: Follow-up Surveys in Zambia , 2002 .

[38]  R. Quick Changing community behaviour: experience from three African countries , 2003, International journal of environmental health research.

[39]  S. Huttly,et al.  An intervention for the promotion of hygienic feces disposal behaviors in a shanty town of Lima, Peru. , 2002, Health education research.