Documenting Our Impact
Dozens of independent, university-based researchers have
examined the effectiveness of PCI’s
entertainment-education methodology and the impact of its
programs on family planning, the prevention of HIV, and promotion
of gender equality and other educational issues. Numerous
books have been written and five research papers have been
published in peer-reviewed journals documenting the important
role our unique use of serial dramas play in changing the
attitudes and behavior of their audience members. Please contact
us for information on how to get copies of the books and research
papers.

Radio: A Post Nine-Eleven
Strategy for Reaching the World's Poor
By Stephen Sposato and Wm. A. Smith
University Press of America
(2005)
Co-authors Stephen Sposato and Wm. A. Smith weave true stories
about how villagers in some of the poorest countries in the
world have been helped by the modern communication tool for
social change. PCI's program Taru
in India and Ushikwapo Shikamana
in Kenya are featured examples in the book.
Entertainment-Education and Social
Change: History, Research and Practice
By Arvind Singhal (ed.), Michael J. Cody (ed.), Everett M.
Rogers (ed.) and Miquel Sabido (ed.) Everett M. Rogers, and
Corinne L. Shefner-Rogers.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
(2004)
This collection of essays provides an indepth
history of social change communications from 1958 to present
day. In one essay, authors Arvind Singhal, Devendra Sharma,
Michael J. Papa, and Kim Witte discuss the process PCI's underwent to create the serial drama Taru
in India. PCI founder David Poindexter contributes an essay
on the history of entertainment education.

Taru Project
By Arvind Singhal, Ohio University; Kim Witte, Michigan State
and Johns Hopkins University; and Nithya Muthuswamy and Desiree
Duff of Michigan State University
Population Communications
International (December 2003)
This research on PCI's radio
serial drama Taru broadcast
in the Indian state of Bihar highlights the value added when
entertainment-education programs are strategically integrated
with community-based organizations and locally available health
care services. It further validates the impact of utilizing
intensive publicity to prime audience receptivity.
read more

Combating AIDS,
Communications Strategies in Action
By Arvind Singhal and Everett M. Rogers
Sage Publishing (November
2002)
This
award winning book focuses on communication strategies and
how they can effectively mobilize political action, target
high-risk groups, and overcome stigma. The authors described
and analyzed the value of entertainment-education strategy
in HIV prevention and care, highlighting the use of popular,
long-running television and radio soap operas to engage audiences
emotionally and create a forum for public debate and discussion.
PCI Impact's Ushikwapo Shikamana
program in Kenya and the Tanzania serial drama Twende
na Wakati are featured.

Entertainment-Education
and Social Change: An Analysis of Parasocial Interaction,
Social Learning, Collective Efficacy, and Paradoxical Communication
By Michael Papa, Arvind Singhal, Sweety Law, Saumya Pant,
Suruchi Sood, Everett M. Rogers, and Corinne L. Shefner-Rogers.
The Journal of Communication
(December 2000)
Researchers found that PCI’s radio soap
opera in India, Tinka
Tinka Sukh (Little Steps for a Better Life),
promoted discussion among audience members about the program’s
educational content, and inspired villagers to engage in collective
action to address social practices such as the taking and
giving of dowry and the education of children.

Effects of an Entertainment-Education
Radio Soap Opera on Family Planning and HIV Prevention in
St. Lucia
By Peter W. Vaughan, Alleyne Regis, and Edwin St. Catherine
International Family Planning
Perspectives (December 2000)
This is a study of Apwé
Plézi (After the Pleasure), a radio program
in St. Lucia produced by the RARE Center for Tropical Conservation
in partnership with PCI Impact. The study examines the
program’s success in promoting the use of contraception,
gender equality, and the prevention of HIV transmission. Apwé
Plézi’s effect on behavior included listeners’
adoption of family planning methods and improved attitudes
toward monogamy and family relations. The drama also helped
to increase the number of visits to family planning clinics
and was responsible for the increase of condom sales. A decline
in births in St. Lucia can also be attributed to the program.

Entertainment-Education and HIV/AIDS
Prevention: A Field Experiment in Tanzania
By Peter W. Vaughan, Everett M. Rogers, Arvind Singhal, and
Ramadhan M. Swalehe
The Journal of Health Communication
(April-June Supplement 2000)
An evaluation of PCI’s radio serial drama
in Tanzania, Twende na Wakati
(Let’s Go With the Times), indicated that the drama
had measurable effects on listeners’ adoption of HIV/AIDS
prevention methods. These included a reduction of sexual partners
and an increase in condom use. Twende
na Wakati influenced these behaviors by increasing
the communication among listeners about HIV/AIDS, the awareness
of personal risk of contracting HIV/AIDS, and self-efficacy
(an individual’s belief that he or she can control specific
outcomes in life) with respect to preventing HIV/AIDS.

Efficacy in Letter-Writing to
an Entertainment-Education Radio Serial
By Sweety Law and Arvind Singhal
Gazette (October 1999)
Researchers examining letters from listeners concluded that
Tinka
Tinka Sukh motivated the listeners to reexamine their
personal beliefs, gain confidence from having learned new
information, and set goals and put them into action. The program
inspired individuals to form community groups to counter superstition
and dowry.

Effects of an Entertainment-Education
Radio Soap Opera on Family Planning Behavior in Tanzania
By Everett M. Rogers, Peter W. Vaughan, Ramadhan M.A. Swalehe,
Nagesh Rao, Peer Svenkerud, and Suruchi Sood
Studies in Family Planning
(September 1999)
A national evaluation indicated that Twende
na Wakati increased Tanzanians’ perception that
marrying at a later age is better, increased listeners’
self-efficacy regarding planning their family size, had measurable
effects on listeners’ adoption of contraceptive methods,
and influenced listeners to speak with their spouses and peers
about contraception. The study concludes that the program
played an important role in the early stage of Tanzania’s
transition from very high to lower fertility rates.
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