Impact Data - Straight Talk / Parent Talk Campaign - Impact on Parents

Straight Talk is an adolescent sexuality and reproductive health (ASRH) programme, started in 1995 by the Kenya Association of Professional Counsellors as an information, education and communication programme that produces behaviour change communication (BCC) materials for adolescents and important adults in their lives, such as teachers and parents. The central STF materials being assessed in the study from which the below data were excerpted are: a) Parent Talk newspaper (3 issues of which had been published at the time of data collection); b) Straight Talk radio programmes (e.g., a multilingual programme for adolescents and a half-hour parent-centred weekly programme, which airs in 6 languages); and c) Straight Talk and Youth Talk newspapers. In order to assess the dose-response association between exposure to STF materials and the study outcomes, parents were classified into 4 groups: a) those not exposed to any item, b) those exposed to 1 item, c) those exposed to 2 items and d) those exposed to all 3 items. For the purpose of this study, districts receiving just the English newspapers and radio show are characterised as "low intensity", whereas those receiving the English-language papers and radio shows as well as the local language newspaper and radio show are characterised as "high intensity".
About 62% of parents who had read Parent Talk (52 parents) said that they took some type of action as a result of reading Parent Talk. The most common action was to talk to other parents/friends (39%), talk with their child/children's friends (17%), recommend the magazine to someone (17%), or talk with spouse (13%).
The 55% (n=367) of parents who listened to Straight Talk radio were asked whether they had ever taken any action as a result of the exposure, and 62% said they had. For most (90%), the action comprised talking to their children.
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