Authors
Donati,Dante, Rao,Nandan Mark, Orozco Olvera,Victor Hugo, Munoz Boudet,Ana Maria
Related Organizations
- 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
Table of Contents
- Introduction 4
- Contribution to the Literature 7
- Background and Intervention 9
- Malaria 9
- The Intervention 9
- Theoretical Framework 11
- Study Design 12
- Cluster-randomized Controlled Trial 12
- Stratified Recruitment 14
- Timeline and Data 16
- Study Timeline 16
- Survey Samples and Administrative Data 16
- Outcome Measures 18
- Empirical Specifications 19
- Analysis of Survey Data 19
- Analysis of Administrative Data 19
- Results 21
- Samples Characteristics and Randomization Checks 21
- Survey-based Results 22
- Preventative behaviors and response actions during the campaign 22
- Self-reported malaria incidence after the campaign 25
- Evidence from Administrative Data 27
- Placebo Regressions and Robustness Checks 29
- Mechanisms: Limited Effectiveness or Limited Reach? 30
- Post-Campaign Recall 30
- Individual-level Feed Experiment 31
- Targeting Matters 32
- Implications for Practitioners 35
- Cost-effectiveness 35
- Conclusions 36
- Content Development and Campaign Management 43
- Developing content for different personas 43
- Campaign dissemination via Facebook and Instagram ads 46
- Facebook and Instagram community management 46
- Survey Questions 48
- Longitudinal Survey 48
- Cross-sectional Survey 48
- Individual-level Study 49
- Figures 50
- Tables 52