Seven Things This Year Campaign on Mother and Child Health

Launched in Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar, in July 2012 and completed in 2014, "Seven Things This Year" was a United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) campaign that aimed to engage women and mothers in Myanmar to enhance their role and contribution to child health and development by promoting 7 key family health practices for the better health of their children:
- Exclusive breastfeeding from birth to 6 months of age and appropriate complementary feeding starting at 6 months;
- Good nutrition for pregnant and lactating mothers;
- Full and complete immunisation courses for infants;
- Ensurance that under-5 children sleep under insecticide-treated bednets;
- Hand-washing with soap, especially after using the toilet and before handling food, eating, or feeding children;
- Provision of food to sick children and increase in their fluid intake; and
- Recognition when children need outside care and, when they do, active seeking of treatment from appropriate service providers.
Interpersonal communication (IPC) strategies, including training, combined with community participation and multimedia components, were part of this effort to ensure that mother and child health is placed at the top of the agenda of all Myanmar families. Engaging women and mothers directly in an effort to enhance their role in and contribution to improved child health and development involved providing opportunities for women and mothers to meet with each other and to facilitate positive family health practices aimed at the well-being of their children. Seven Things This Year also assisted in enabling women and mothers to play a supportive role in enhancing community health outcomes.
For example, in July 2013, UNICEF collaborated with the Myanmar Maternal and Child Welfare Association (MMCWA) to host a 2-day forum in Sittwe, Rakhine State. The objective of the forum was to empower caregivers - especially women and mothers - in the promotion of family health practices as part of UNICEF's child survival and development activities in Myanmar, which have been underway for over 60 years in this country. The rationale: "The role of care givers - especially women and mothers - is critical to promoting good family health care practices. By engaging primary care givers themselves, this forum is an important step towards improved child health and well-being in Myanmar," said Ms Yosi Echeverry Burckhardt, Chief of the UNICEF Field Office in Sittwe. Over the weeks and months following the forum, MMCWA volunteers promoted discussion around key family health care practices as well as local mother and child health issues. Participants were then asked to reach out to 7 families to raise awareness on the benefits of positive family health care practices. MMCWA planned to roll out the initiative across all rural, urban, and camp communities in Rakhine State, beginning in 100 villages in Sittwe and Myauk U. The plan was to train camp leaders to ensure that internally displaced people (IDP) could share in the benefits of the campaign.
Click here to access the Seven Things This Year Facebook page, where the information, education, and communication (IEC) developed as part of this project can be viewed.
Children, Health, Immunisation and Vaccines, Women
"Evidence shows that a significant reduction in maternal, new-born and child-related disease and death can be achieved through simple, low-cost, high impact interventions aimed at changing the behavior and practices of individuals and families alike”, said UNICEF's Yosi Echeverry Burckhardt.
Email from Erica Mattellone to The Communication Initiative on April 13 2015; and UNICEF Myanmar website and Seven Things This Year Facebook page - both accessed on April 13 2015.
- Log in to post comments











































