Skip Navigation

Health

News

  • Print
  • Comment
  • | Share

HIV awareness goes mobile

Source: BBC Online

29 October 2008 | EN | 中文

Mobile phone

Flickr/whiteafrican

Text messages will be sent to mobile phones in South Africa to encourage people to be tested and treated for HIV/AIDS.

Project Masiluleke will send one million texts a day to South Africans after it is launched on 1 December. The messages are written in English and local languages such as Zulu, and will include prompts to call helplines. Many of the messages were composed with the assistance of local communities.

Trials of the system increased calls to the National Aids Helpline by 200 per cent.

The system will use PCM or 'please call me' messages. These are free to send and are often used by people with no prepaid phone credit to ask their friends to call them.

It is estimated that there are around 43 million mobile phone handsets in South Africa, which has a population of 49 million people.

Information about tuberculosis will eventually be available on the system as well.

Link to full article in BBC Online

Add your comment

This is your network: share your views on any of our articles by adding your comments.

You need to be signed in to post a comment or to email a consenting comment author. Please sign in or sign up.

All comments are subject to approval and we reserve the right to edit comments containing inappropriate/unsuitable language. SciDev.Net holds copyright for all material posted on the website. Please see terms of use for further details.

All SciDev.Net material is free to reproduce providing that the source and author are appropriately credited. For further details see Creative Commons.

Back to News
To the top