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[Commlist] call for book chapters: Communicating health and pandemics in Africa: Theory, Practice, and Guidelines
Fri Jan 15 21:23:44 GMT 2021
Call for Book Chapters
Title
Communicating health and pandemics in Africa: Theory, Practice, and
Guidelines
Editors: Emmanuel Ngwainmbi, PhD1 & Levi Zeleza Manda, PhD2
1.0 SCOPE OF THE BOOK
The rapid spread of the SARs-COV 2, or novel coronavirus, the causative
agent of COVID-19, from the City of Wuhan in China in late 2019, has
wrought a lot of anxiety and economic downturn in the world. Political
tempers have flared up with the West, led by the US, accusing China of
deliberately releasing the virus into the world or covering it up until
the infection reached pandemic levels. The World Health Organization
(WHO) has been accused of being complicit in China's 'hiding' of the
coronavirus.
This West versus East (China) 'conflict' has led to a lack of
international agreements on a common approach to eliminating the virus.
Russia, China, the US, Germany, France, Australia, and the UK are all
working on their candidate vaccines. When Russia announced its Sputnik 5
vaccine release, the West was skeptical, but China and other
sympathizers of Russia either overtly or silently managed the news.
Then, by December 2020, Pfizer and Moderna had announced they had an
effective vaccine. January 11, 2021, Pfizer announced it can quickly
develop vaccines for future Covid-19 variants, fueling suspicions that a
world order ordained by the Rockefeller Foundation, per its website, put
in place in 2010 an assimilated plan to reduce the world population,
annihilate the African population, and strain the global economy.
However, media reports show that a densely populated Africa has so far
recorded less than 50,000 deaths, whereas, as USA Today reports, health
experts had forecasted that African health care systems would be
overwhelmed as cases of COVID-19 escalated, and deaths exceeded 300,000
to nearly 3 million.3 To see how a region with 1.3 billion people living
under challenging socio-economic conditions reports such a low mortality
rate from a pandemic that is causing
1 He teaches in the Human Communication Studies Department, University
of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA; author & Editor of 20 books.
2 Managing Editor, Journal of Development and Communication Studies;
Executive Director, Development Media Consulting, Blantyre, Malawi, and
Senior Lecturer, Department of Journalism, Blantyre International
University, Malawi
3 USA Today, www.usatoday.com <http://www.usatoday.com> The claim: The
African continent has only seen 46,000 novel coronavirus deaths.
Retrieved, January 13, 2021
2
havoc in ‘advanced’ countries like the US, France, and the UK, we need
to understand how information and communication of the pandemic in
particular and health in general is perceived and managed.
Even as a global vaccination program is in progress to protect people
from the virus and combat the pandemic, which has killed almost 2
million people globally4 and infected 80 million people since late
December 2020, the coronavirus has caused rifts akin to the cold war.
Thus, in addition to being a health and economic challenges, pandemics
can be peace and security, geopolitical, and international relations.
Pandemics are not uncommon in the history of humanity. But it is
probably the first time a pandemic has spread this fast and widely,
virtually shutting down the world economy and education system. As
Joseph Stiglitz5 and others have argued, one reason is that
globalization has facilitated not only seamless travel; unfettered
economic, business and trade, and online education facilitated by
enhanced communications but also religious fundamentalism, the cultural
dominance of peripheral communities by the economically wealthy core
members of the so-called global village, and epidemics/pandemics.
Unlike EBOLA and HIV/AIDS and other relatively recent emergencies, which
were mostly localized to specific epicenters such as West Africa for
EBOLA, sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia for HIV/AIDs, the COVID-19
pandemic has respected no borders and generated a frenzy of medical
science, political blame games including conspiracies such as China
deliberately unleashed the virus on the world economy; religious
protests against the compulsory wearing of masks in the USA, France and
Germany, and a plethora of 'fake' cures and medicines.
An infodemic has complicated the WHO's task, international health
organizations, and national ministries of health with a barrage of
mostly false and fake information about the disease. Its image, as the
face of world health, is being challenged as some health experts,
development communication scholars, and media outlets question its role
in promoting access to (Covid-19) vaccines and other forms of treatment
produced in the West while undermining those made in countries like
Madagascar and Cameroon.
Nevertheless, the COVID-19 infodemic has affected journalists' work,
essentially because most journalists were not prepared enough to cover
science, diseases, and sanitation issues and do not have adequate
reference materials, guidelines, and toolkits. As a result, in most
African media, pandemics and health coverage is often shallow and
somewhat haphazard. The linkage between development, international and
national budgets and disease often miss. So, does investigative
journalism. Moreover, based on personal
4 Data from the CDC · WHO · ECDC · Wikipedia · The New York Times
retrieved January 13, 2021
5 Globalization and its discontents
3
experiences,6 communication officers in governmental, intergovernmental,
and non-governmental institutions do not adequately construct or
communicate health information to the affected population, leaving the
masses vulnerable to infectious diseases and more reliant on unsafe
traditional healing methods.
While numerous textbooks on teaching and practicing health journalism
exist (with the UNESCO Model Curriculum7 being widely used), few focus
on pandemics such as COVID-19 and how they relate to, among other
things, international development; economic growth; universal education,
agricultural production, and climate change. Even the cited UNESCO Model
Curriculum does not go deep enough to provide a standalone resource. The
Model curriculum is mostly a compilation of curricula and syllabi. While
health appears several times, the keywords' pandemic' and 'sanitation'
do not appear anywhere in the entire model curriculum. This is a severe
lacuna, and it reveals a lack of focus on what the proposed textbook
intends to achieve.
II.TOPICS OF INTEREST
Because this book seeks to provide the theoretical and historical
context of the challenges in communicating health in Africa as well as
the practice, guidelines, or tools needed for sharing health issues and
pandemics in Africa, book chapters will be written in the form of (a)
enlightening readers (health practitioners, media personnel,
policymakers); (b) constructive recommendations for proper communication
of health matters and pandemics; and (c) offering teaching and learning
modules using case studies, examples, exercises and sample test
questions. The book will specifically:
- Explain how health and pandemics in Africa have been reported and
communicated to African and external publics by journalists, news
networks, and other communication professionals
- Offer general recommendations for communicating health and pandemics
to healthcare administrators and intergovernmental institutions
- Provide materials for teaching and learning about communication for
health, Sanitation, and pandemics, and tools for journalists covering
pandemics, health, and sanitation
Provisional Table of Contents: Topical areas
6 Editor, Emmanuel Ngwainmbi, has worked as a communication consultant
for 9 international development agencies in Africa and as a
Communication Adviser in various countries in east, central, north and
southern Africa
7 Model curricula for journalism education: a compendium of new syllabi
4
Part 1a: Background of Health Communication, Information Sharing, and
management
- History and nature of communicating health in Africa and about Africa
- Reviews of coverage of pandemics and health issues by the foreign and
local press
- The political economy of health coverage in Africa
- Health and pandemics coverage in Africa: Case studies: Ebola; AIDS;
COVID-19,
- How populations perceive news about pandemics (cultures and taboos, etc.)
- How populations manage communications about health (factors
influencing temporal and sustainable information management)
- Social accountability and health journalism in Africa
- Ethics of health and pandemics reporting in Africa
- Understanding and communicating health research and science
- Pandemics and Infodemics, misinformation, disinformation
- Nexus between health, journalism, and development in Africa
- Media Coverage of the UN Sustainable Development Health goal in Africa
- Media and Africa's 'normalized' diseases, e.g., Malaria
- Evidence-informed health journalism and advocacy for policy change in
Africa
- Women, Youth and disadvantage groups, health and journalism in Africa
- Budgets and health allocations in Africa
- Cures, treatments and vaccines and media coverage in Africa
- Socio-religio-cultural factors influencing the spread of pandemics
Part 1b: Regional Case studies
- Radio coverage of health and pandemics in Western or Eastern or
Northern or Southern Africa
- Newspaper and magazine coverage of health and pandemics in Western or
Eastern Northern and Southern Africa
- Social/citizen media coverage of health and pandemics in Western or
Eastern Northern and Southern Africa
- Multimedia coverage of health and pandemics in Western or Eastern
Northern and Southern Africa
- TV coverage of health and pandemics in Western or Eastern Northern and
Southern Africa
- Tools/guidelines for covering non-communicable diseases: Diabetes,
Asthma, Hypertension, etc.
Part 2: General Recommendations for proper messaging and communication
of health information
5
Part 3: Learning modules
Rubrics:
- experiences in communicating health in Africa from communication
scholars, health practitioners, healthcare administrators
- Learning objectives
- Key Concepts (defined)
- Cases/Examples
- Revision exercises
- Field exercise
- Sample answers
III. IMPORTANT DATES
Abstract only with the title due February 27, 2021
Preliminary acceptance/rejection notification: March 10, 2021
Full chapter submission: June 30, 2021
First review notification: July 31, 2021
Revised chapter submission: August 31, 2020
Camera-Ready Submission: September 30, 2021
IV. SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
Please send your abstract of 300- 500 words and six keywords along with
a short bio 200-300 words, and a tentative Time of Completion to Prof.
Emmanuel Ngwainmbi ((engwainmbi /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(engwainmbi /at/ gmail.com)>)
with the subject "Challenges of communicating health and pandemics in
Africa: Theory, Practice, and Guidelines-BOOK chapter." Upon acceptance
of your proposal, further instructions for Press submission guidelines
will be communicated
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