Using social norms theory for health promotion in low-income countries.

Beniamino Cislaghi ORCID logo; LoriHeise; (2018) Using social norms theory for health promotion in low-income countries. Health promotion international, 34 (3). pp. 616-623. ISSN 0957-4824 DOI: 10.1093/heapro/day017
Copy

Social norms can greatly influence people's health-related choices and behaviours. In the last few years, scholars and practitioners working in low- and mid-income countries (LMIC) have increasingly been trying to harness the influence of social norms to improve people's health globally. However, the literature informing social norm interventions in LMIC lacks a framework to understand how norms interact with other factors that sustain harmful practices and behaviours. This gap has led to short-sighted interventions that target social norms exclusively without a wider awareness of how other institutional, material, individual and social factors affect the harmful practice. Emphasizing norms to the exclusion of other factors might ultimately discredit norms-based strategies, not because they are flawed but because they alone are not sufficient to shift behaviour. In this paper, we share a framework (already adopted by some practitioners) that locates norm-based strategies within the wider array of factors that must be considered when designing prevention programmes in LMIC.



picture_as_pdf
Using-social-norms-theory-for-health-promotion-in-low-income-countries.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC 3.0

View Download

Explore Further

Read more research from the creator(s):

Find work associated with the faculties and division(s):

Find work from this publication: