cover image: Can Facebook Ads Prevent Malaria ? Two Field Experiments in India (English)

Can Facebook Ads Prevent Malaria ? Two Field Experiments in India (English)

5 Nov 2024

This study uses a cluster randomized controlled trial to evaluate the impact of a nationwide malaria prevention advertising campaign delivered through social media in India. Ads were randomly assigned at the district level, and the study relies on data from two independently recruited samples (8,257 individuals) and administrative records. Among users residing in solid (concrete) dwellings, where malaria risk is lower, the campaign led to an 11 percent increase in mosquito net usage and a 13 percent increase in timely treatment seeking. Self-reported malaria incidence decreased by 44 percent. Consistently, recorded health facility data indicate a reduction in urban monthly incidence of 6.2 cases per million people, corresponding to 30 percent of the overall monthly incidence rate of malaria. Conversely, the study finds no impact on households living in non-solid dwellings, which face higher malaria risk, nor among rural settlements where such dwellings are more prevalent. To disentangle if this lack of impact stems from ineffective content or insufficient reach, an individual-level trial was conducted (1,542 individuals), ensuring campaign exposure for both household types. The findings indicate an increase in bed net usage and timely treatment seeking for both groups, underscoring the need for improved targeting in social media campaigns to fulfill public health goals.
india poverty urban development social protection digital government quality of education social media south asia information and communication technologies education for all trade linkages nutrition and population ict applications trade facilitation and logistics health promotion and disease prevention enterprise applications human development and gender spillovers and connectivity impact evaluation for evidence-based policy connectivity and lagging regions behavior change in public health national urban policies

Authors

Donati,Dante, Rao,Nandan Mark, Orozco Olvera,Victor Hugo, Munoz Boudet,Ana Maria

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DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10967
Disclosure Date
2024/11/05
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Can Facebook Ads Prevent Malaria ? Two Field Experiments in India
Originating Unit
Off of Sr VP Dev Econ/Chief Econ (DECVP)
Pages
66
Product Line
Advisory Services & Analytics
Published in
United States of America
Rel Proj ID
8S-Pilot Impact Evaluation Of Online Entertainment-Education Again -- P163633
Series Name
Policy Research working paper; DIGITAL; Impact Evaluation series; RRR;
TF No/Name
TF0A4734-Pilot Impact Evaluation of Online Intervention against GBV
Unit Owning
DIME Gender, Eco Opp & Fragility (DIME2)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

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