Condom Social Marketing, Pentecostalism, and Structural Adjustment in Mozambique: A Clash of AIDS Prevention Messages
- 1 March 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Medical Anthropology Quarterly
- Vol. 18 (1), 77-103
- https://doi.org/10.1525/maq.2004.18.1.77
Abstract
Despite significant debate about the efficacy, ideology, and ethics of the method, condom social marketing (CSM) has become the dominant approach to AIDS education in many sub‐Saharan African countries. However, critics have charged that social marketing (SM) distracts from the structural determinants of health‐related behavior and excludes genuine community participation. This article argues that the diffusion of SM techniques in Africa is not driven by demonstrated efficacy but is attributable to the promotion of privatization and free markets in the structural adjustment era across the region. The CSM experience in a central Mozambican community reveals the dangers of using the method at the expense of community dialogue and participation to confront the AIDS epidemic. The advertising campaign developed to sell condoms has clashed with Pentecostal and Independent Churches, now a majority of the population, that have expanded rapidly across the region spreading a contrasting message about sexuality and risky behavior, [social marketing, Pentecostal, African Independent Church, Mozambique, AIDS]Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Primary health care in the era of HIV/AIDS. Some implications for health systems reformSocial Science & Medicine, 2002
- Bringing Health Services To The Poor Through Social Marketing: Ethical IssuesPublished by SAGE Publications ,2002
- Health promotion, advocacy and health inequalities: a conceptual frameworkHealth Promotion International, 2000
- Odo-Ya Project: HIV/AIDS Prevention in the Context of Afro-Brazilian ReligionJournal of Health Communication, 2000
- Sexual Activity and Condom Use in Lusaka, ZambiaInternational Family Planning Perspectives, 1998
- Media Advocacy: A Strategy for Advancing Policy and Promoting HealthHealth Education Quarterly, 1996
- The politics of education and cultural productionReview of African Political Economy, 1990
- Structural adjustment and social policy in MozambiqueReview of African Political Economy, 1990
- Social Marketing and Public Health InterventionHealth Education Quarterly, 1988
- Doubts about ‘social marketing’Health Policy and Planning, 1987