
Traditional Music as a Sustainable Social Technology for Community Health Promotion in Africa: “Singing and Dancing for Health” in Rura Northern Ghana
Author(s) -
Michael Frishkopf,
David Zakus,
Hasan Hamze,
Mubarak Alhassan,
Ibrahim Abukari Zukpeni
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the ghanaian times
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0855-1502
DOI - 10.4314/ljh.v27i2.4
Subject(s) - singing , health promotion , promotion (chess) , sociology , economic growth , health care , political science , acoustics , physics , politics , law , economics
Music is a social technology of enormous potential for improving community health. This paper reports on a series of applied ethnomusicological interventions, enacted as a participatory action research project in northern Ghana, for health promotion. Initial interventions, performed by local professional urban artists, proved effective. But as they were not sustainable, we followed up by training village-based amateur youth groups, rooted in the local community , to perform a similar repertoire. These methods can be transposed to other societies maintaining participatory musical traditions, leading to improved community health whenever behavior is a primary determinant, as is so often the case (WHO 2002)