2019
DOI: 10.2166/washdev.2019.019
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Challenges and facilitators of public engagement with water, sanitation, hygiene and other environmental health issues in Ghana and Uganda: perspectives of scientists, journalists and the public

Abstract: Despite many water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH) and other environmental health challenges in sub-Saharan Africa, little is known about interactions involving scientists, journalists and the public to aid public understanding of the relationship between WASH and health. Using purposive sampling, we conducted key informant interviews and focus group discussions with scientists, journalists and members of the public in Ghana and Uganda to identify issues associated with the promotion of public engagement with WASH… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Education plays a critical role, as knowledge sharing involving community members is the key to addressing WASH and related challenges (Kema et al 2012;Hetherington et al 2017;Adams & Boateng 2018;Silvestri et al 2018;Aduro & Ebenso 2019;Appiah et al 2020;Hovden et al 2020). However, infrastructures that enable people to act upon these challenges are crucial to managing, sustaining and upscaling new practices (Kariuki et al 2012;Banana et al 2015;Intriago Zambrano et al 2020).…”
Section: How Important Is Education In Public Acceptance Of Wash?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Education plays a critical role, as knowledge sharing involving community members is the key to addressing WASH and related challenges (Kema et al 2012;Hetherington et al 2017;Adams & Boateng 2018;Silvestri et al 2018;Aduro & Ebenso 2019;Appiah et al 2020;Hovden et al 2020). However, infrastructures that enable people to act upon these challenges are crucial to managing, sustaining and upscaling new practices (Kariuki et al 2012;Banana et al 2015;Intriago Zambrano et al 2020).…”
Section: How Important Is Education In Public Acceptance Of Wash?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A range of tools and methods, which have been shown to raise greater awareness of sanitation and hygiene issues, are being proposed in the literature, including media, planning workshops, training sessions and house-to-house visits by village authorities and health officials, and co-created learning processes with engaged stakeholders (Kariuki et al 2012;Kema et al 2012;Bisung et al 2015;Hetherington et al 2017;Silvestri et al 2018). The key in all these approaches is, on one hand, the simplification of the scientific language used and, on the other hand, using human-centred storytelling approaches that can increase public engagement on environmental health and WASH issues (Appiah et al 2020). Also, integrating tools such as 'photo voice', community theatre, can enable the expression of issues difficult to express with words (Silvestri et al 2018).…”
Section: How Important Is Education In Public Acceptance Of Wash?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As journalists rely on scientists for information about marine issues, effective communication between the two appears essential. Journalists and scientists have been surveyed within the context of science news (Johnson, 1963; Ryan, 1979; Peters, 1995; Reed, 2001; Hartz & Chappell, 2005; Ashwell, 2016) and the reporting of special topics such as biotechnology (Gunter, Kinderlerer & Beyleveld, 1999), biomedicine (Dijkstra, Roefs & Drossaert, 2015), sanitation (Appiah et al, 2020) and mercury pollution (Maillé, Saint‐Charles & Lucotte, 2010). However, the journalist–scientist relationship within the context of marine news reporting has hardly received any research attention.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large body of literature has explored the nature and quality of the interactions between journalists and scientists working in different research fields and countries (for an overview of the topic see, e.g., Dudo, 2015;Yeo and Brossard, 2017). With a few exceptions (Kaye et al, 2011;Lo and Peters, 2015;Appiah et al, 2020;Koso, 2021), research on the science-media relationship has largely focused on the USA and other English-speaking countries, as well as on Northern and Western Europe (e.g., Peters, 2007Peters, , 2013Peters et al, 2008a;Dijkstra et al, 2015). In consequence, regions such as Southern European countries have been less studied when it comes to understanding the science-media relationship.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%