HARAMAYAUNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF HEALTH AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES
• Application of Social Marketing and Response Tool (SMART)
on Breast Feeding
Prepared by :ASAYE GOJAME DADO
Submitted to :Instructor Mr.Melake Demena,Assistant Professor
Content of title
• Inroduction
• Historical backgound of breast feeding
• Promotion of SMART on breast feeding
• Initiation of SMART on breast feeding
• Application of SMART on breast feeding
• Conclusion
• Referrence
Objectives
At the end of this title be able to
Understand the definitions
Know promotion of SMART on Breast feeding
Identify the initiation of SMART on Breast feeding
Know the application of SMART on Breast
feeding
INTRODUCTION
• Social marketing involves the application of commercial
marketing principles to advance the public good.
• A social marketing campaign starts with the identification
of a benefit (e.g., breastfeeding) and how the target
audience perceives this benefit.
Cont…..
• Developing effective social marketing campaigns requires an
in-depth understanding of the determinants of the behavior in
the different contexts where it will take place and the
consequences of performing the behavior or not.
• This understanding allows for the initial development of the
campaign’s brand, relevance, and positioning through an
evidence-based marketing mix following the ‘‘4Ps’’
(product,price, place, promotion).
Cont…..
• The marketing mix is designed to maximize use of the
product(e.g., breast pump) (or service[e.g., peer counselors]
or activity [e.g., breastfeeding support group]), taking into
account consumers’ perceptions about the price or sacrifices
they will need to make to follow the target behavior.
• For example, employed women may be very resistant to
consider exclusive breastfeeding if sacrificing their jobs is
what it would take for them to be able to do so.
Cont……..
• Social marketing has currently emerged as a popular
tool in health promotion, being given special
attention in recent public health literature.
• This popularity is based on reasonable evidence that
carefully managed social marketing programmes
can be very effective.
• Breastfeeding is nature’s best way of nurturing the
child.
Introduction to Breastfeeding
• Breast feeding is the feeding of an infant or young child with
breast milk directly from female human breasts (i.e., via lactation)
rather than using infant formula.
• Babies have a sucking reflex that enables them to suck and
swallow milk.
• Experts recommend that children be breastfed within one hour of
birth, exclusively breastfed for the first six months, and then
breastfed until age two with age-appropriate, nutritionally
adequate and safe complementary foods.
Breast feeding History
• Breastfeeding has been important since the beginning of
mankind.
• In the Egyptian, Greek and Roman empires, women
usually fed only their own children.
• However, breastfeeding began to be seen as something too
common to be done by royalty, and wet nurses (a wet nurse
is someone who nurses another's baby regularly) were
employed to breastfeed the children of the royal families.
Cont…….
• This extended over time, particularly in Western Europe, where
noble women often made use of wet nurses.
• But lower class women breastfed their infants and used a wet nurse
only if they were unable to feed their own infant.
• The trend of wet-nursing gradually waned in developed countries
throughout the last century, and during the post–World War II baby
boom was replaced by the trend of bottle feeding, thanks to the
extensive marketing and availability of infant formula.
Social Marketing as a Tool for Promoting
Breastfeeding
• Marketing initiatives include promotions and advertising that support
or encourage breastfeeding as well as imagery in the media that
strengthen the perception of breastfeeding as a normal, accepted
activity.
• Marketing can take place through broad venues traditionally
considered part of advertising or can be more targeted and use
methods such as professional endorsements, providing items to
targeted audiences, and sponsoring events focused on a specific
Cont……..
• Media campaigns are commonly presented to a wide audience and
use public channels such as television, radio, printed materials, or
outdoor advertising.
• Social marketing campaigns go beyond media campaigns.
• They are comprehensive, multifaceted approaches providing
targeted, coordinated interventions to a variety of audiences,
including consumers, their support systems, health care providers,
the community, and the general public.
Initiatives taken to encourage breastfeeding
• World Breastfeeding Week (1-7
August, 2013): World Breastfeeding Week
2013 is part of the GBICS (Global Breastfeeding
Initiative for Child Survival) Programme.
Cont………
• The GBICS Programme aims to contribute to the
achievement of sustainable development - beyond the
Millennium Development Goals - by scaling up
breastfeeding and infant and young child interventions
and transforming Policies into Practice which contributes
to efforts aimed at addressing climate change and gender
inequality in the framework of human rights.
Cont……
• World Breastfeeding Trends Initiative
(WBTi):The WBTi, which serves as a lens to find out gaps
in policy and programmes, helps nations initiate action to bridge
these gaps.
• This programme is already running in over 80 countries.
• The brain child of IBFAN (The International Baby Food Action
Network) Asia, WBTi is an integral part of two global projects
jointly funded by NORAD and SIDA.
Cont………
• National Institute of Public Cooperation and Child Development
and Breastfeeding Promotion Network of India jointly coordinated
the India 2012 WBTi assessment.
• The India’s 2012 Report is the assessment of the state of
implementation of the Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child
Feeding, and accomplished under the World Breastfeeding Trends
Initiative (WBTi) of IBFAN Asia.
• Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI):
Hospitals and maternity units set a powerful example for new
mothers.
• The Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI), launched in 1991, is
an effort by UNICEF and the World Health Organization to ensure
that all maternities, whether free standing or in a hospital, become
centers of breastfeeding support.
• The initiative is a global effort for improving the role of maternity
services to enable mothers to breastfeed babies for the best start in
Cont……….
• It aims at improving the care of pregnant women,
mothers and newborns at health facilities that
provide maternity services for protecting,
promoting and supporting breastfeeding, in
accordance with the International Code of
Marketing of Breast milk Substitutes.
APPLICATION OF SMART ON BREAST
FEEDING
Product Price
• . Concrete physical products, services,
practices, and intangible ideas (most often • Sometimes breastfeeding is painful.
the case in the field of public health • Some people might not be comfortable
• . Breastfeeding is the main product. breastfeeding in public.
• Weight loss is the underlying benefit • The economic, social, psychological,
emotional, and physical costs of
breastfeeding.
Cont……………..
Place
• You can access breastfeeding support online.
• You can speak to a lactation consultant for help.
Promotion
• A commercial on television tells you about benefits of breastfeeding.
• There is a website for the New York State Department of Health WIC Program.
Cont…………..
Application of social marketing principles
on breast feeding
• 1. Phase 1: Preliminary Planning
Identify the problem for breast feeding
Goal setting/develop Goals for breast feeding
promotion
Make an outline for breast feeding
Project costs for program
CONT……….
Phase 2: Consumer Analysis
Segment and identify the priority population
Identify formative research methods regarding
breast feeding
Identify mothers wants, needs, and preferences
Develop preliminary ideas
Cont…….
• Phase 3: Market Analysis
Establish and define the market mix (4P's)
Product, Price, Place, Promotion interms of breast
feeding.
Assess the market to identify competitors
Cont…..
• Phase 4: Channel Analysis
Identify appropriate communication channels
Assess options for program distribution
Identify communication roles
Cont……..
• Phase 5: Develop Interventions, Materials,
and Pretest
– Develop program intervention
– Interpret the marketing mix
– Pretest and refine the program
Cont……..
6. Phase 6: Implementation
Communicate with partners
Activate communication and distribution strategies
Document and compare procedures
Refine the program
Cont………..
• Phase 7: Evaluation
Is priority population receiving the message“
Assess the impact of the program on the priority
population especially on mothers of breast feeding.
Ensure that program delivery is consistent
Analyze changes in the priority population
Conclusion
• Social marketing is a framework that has been
successfully applied to improve breastfeeding and
other behavioral and health outcomes.
• Changing public opinion toward breastfeeding in
public is a major step that needs to be taken for
making breastfeeding ‘‘in all places and at all times’’a
social norm in the country.
Cont………
• For this to happen it is important to design social
marketing campaigns that target the key forces (e.g.,
family and friends, healthcare providers, employers,
formula industry, legislators) that influence the decision
and ability of women to breastfeed for the recommended
amount of time.
Cont…….
• This will require formative research that applies the
social–ecological model to different population
segments in order to identifying the right systems
and individual incentives needed to nudge more
women to breastfeed for longer
• New breastfeeding campaigns need to understand
and take into account the information acquisition
preferences of the target audiences
Acknowledgment
• First I would like to express my heart felt
gratitude to instructor Mr . Melake
Demena ,assistant professor giving group
assignment on SMART and an individual
assignment specific health related topics how
to apply SMART on it.
Reference
1. Global Journal of Management and Business Studies.ISSN 2248-9878
Volume 3, Number 3 (2013), pp. 303-308© Research India
Publicationshttp://www.ripublication.com/gjmbs.htm
2. Review of Social Marketing within Public Health Regional Settings
Snapshot: November 2008 to January 2009
3. International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR) ISSN (Online):
2319-7064 Index Copernicus Value (2013): 6.14 | Impact Factor (2013):
4.438
Cont….
• HealthStyles Survey—Breastfeeding Practices:
2007.wwwcdc.gov/breastfeeding/data/healthsles_s
urvey/survey_2007.htm# (accessed June 10,
2012).
• Lefebvre RC. An integrative model for social
marketing.JSoc Market2011;1:54–72