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1 Communications update January 2010

1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Page 1: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Communications update January 2010

Page 2: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Factors effecting daily life

• Environment– Deprived areas

• Family situation– Single parents but family nearby

• Media consumption– Social networking and ‘real life’

‘My family is very close, very happy, sharing, caring, fun – I couldn’t manage without them’.

‘I’m addicted to Facebook, I love adding pictures, looking at profiles and keeping in touch with friends’.

‘This area is no good, people are drinking on the street and it’s not a good example for my kid’.

Page 3: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Motivated for change

• Intense love for their children encourages them to want to break their ‘vicious cycle’.

• They want their children to have a happier, healthier more successful life than themselves.

‘Being a mother changed my life, for the better in my view. I love my children more than anything’.

‘My life revolves around my son…I don’t really do much for myself’.

‘I’m worried that she may make the same mistakes I did in life’.

Page 4: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Attitudes to health

• Feel pressure about concerns for their children

• Health not a priority compared to safety, money and happiness.

• In terms of health fear of illness/sickness is a concern

• Prevention is not front of mind

‘I worry about doing everything the right way to make them have a good childhood’.

‘Money, nothing is cheap and I’m worried about finance and support’

Page 5: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Opinions of the scheme

• Beneficiaries– Helps with cost of food and formula– Encourages purchase of healthy foods– Rewards beneficiaries for doing something good

for their children

• Health professionals– Helps start kids off with the right foods– Helps improves diets in general

‘It gets you down the fruit and veg aisle’.

‘This audience often need all the help they can get – it’s a way of improving their diet generally’.

Page 6: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Where do beneficiaries get their health information?

• It’s everywhere!– Family and friends– Mother and baby mags and websites– Baby clubs

• Non-professional sources eg super size vs super skinny, Pampers, Chat, OK - friendly tone, information easy to absorb

• Young teens and new mums are more open to information and seek it out• This audience is bombarded with government messages both income

(benefits) and parent related (red book, pregnancy and birth book etc).• Government communications perceived as dull and patronising – therefore

it is rarely engaging• Look for information from unofficial sources especially friends and family

Page 7: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Relationship between beneficiaries and health

professionals• Beneficiaries find it difficult to relate to health

professionals– Transactional rather than supportive– Adult to child– Older mums feel patronised– Disjointed, contradictory advice– Pressure on them to ask the right questions

• Therefore they look for information elsewhere• There is a genuine need for trusted health advice

‘You’re just a number, they try to get you in and out as quickly as possible’.

Page 8: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Health professionals can make a huge difference

The type of relationship parents feel they havewith the Healthy Start scheme is influenced byhow they were informed about the scheme

If presented by health professionals as a healthmeasure, parents are more likely to feel that

theyare working together with Healthy Start for the good of their child

If they find out about the scheme thoughInformation channels (typically from other parents), the relationship is consideredpassive – Healthy Start just send out thevouchers

Page 9: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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What about vitamins?

• Fundamental disconnect re: balanced diet and vitamins

– Beneficiaries and HP agree on this point– BME more aware and open to vitamins messaging– Breastfeeding and vitamins also contradicts

• Growing awareness amongst beneficiaries and health professionals– Presentation on voucher letter– January mailings

Page 10: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Communications objectives

We want to:

• Add value to scheme by providing healthy eating tips, additional health information

• Increase awareness, understanding and take up of vitamins

• Improve uptake amongst first time pregnant women• Support engagement undertaken by Health

Professionals

Page 11: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Materials direct to beneficiaries

• Piggy back on four weekly mailings to provide ongoing information

• Segment beneficiaries by age of oldest child

– 10-40 weeks pregnant– 0-6 months– 7-12 months– 1 – 2 years– 2-3 years– 3-4 years

• Monthly inserts and quarterly magazines

Page 12: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Materials for health professionals to use with

beneficiaries

• HS01 application form revamp• HS02 – user guide revamp• Posters

– HS50 which promotes the scheme as a whole

– HS504 and HS505 which promote vitamins

To come by end of this FY:• Quick guides for potential beneficiaries

including a specific version for under 18’s• Fridge magnets• Recipe cards• BME materials revamp• Alternative versions – revamp

Available now

Page 13: 1 Communications update January 2010. 2 Factors effecting daily life Environment –Deprived areas Family situation –Single parents but family nearby Media

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Materials for health professionals and

retailersBy the end of this FY:

• HS52 – health professionals guide• HS52B – vitamins guide for health

professionals• POS kit for locations providing

vitamins (poster, sticker, table top stand, badges)

• Updated ‘breastfeeding welcome’ stickers

• Retailers guide• Retailers sticker• Retailers quick guide