| Literature DB >> 27783612 |
Michel Tchuenche1, Eurica Palmer2, Vibhuti Haté3, Ananthy Thambinayagam4, Dayanund Loykissoonlal5, Emmanuel Njeuhmeli6, Steven Forsythe1.
Abstract
Given compelling evidence associating voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) with men's reduced HIV acquisition through heterosexual intercourse, South Africa in 2010 began scaling up VMMC. To project the resources needed to complete 4.3 million circumcisions between 2010 and 2016, we (1) estimated the unit cost to provide VMMC; (2) assessed cost drivers and cost variances across eight provinces and VMMC service delivery modes; and (3) evaluated the costs associated with mobilize and motivate men and boys to access VMMC services. Cost data were systematically collected and analyzed using a provider's perspective from 33 Government and PEPFAR-supported (U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief) urban, rural, and peri-urban VMMC facilities. The cost per circumcision performed in 2014 was US$132 (R1,431): higher in public hospitals (US$158 [R1,710]) than in health centers and clinics (US$121 [R1,309]). There was no substantial difference between the cost at fixed circumcision sites and fixed sites that also offer outreach services. Direct labor costs could be reduced by 17% with task shifting from doctors to professional nurses; this could have saved as much as $15 million (R163.20 million) in 2015, when the goal was 1.6 million circumcisions. About $14.2 million (R154 million) was spent on medical male circumcision demand creation in South Africa in 2014-primarily on personnel, including community mobilizers (36%), and on small and mass media promotions (35%). Calculating the unit cost of VMMC demand creation was daunting, because data on the denominator (number of people reached with demand creation messages or number of people seeking VMMC as a result of demand creation) were not available. Because there are no "dose-response" data on demand creation ($X in demand creation will result in an additional Z% increase in VMMC clients), research is needed to determine the appropriate amount and allocation of demand creation resources.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27783612 PMCID: PMC5082632 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Unit costs by mode of service delivery.
Fig 2Unit cost by province.
Fig 3Unit cost by province urbanization level.
Fig 4Unit cost by facility scale of operations.
The red line indicates the relationship between the VMMC unit cost at the facility and the scale of the operation (circumcisions performed per year at each facility).
Fig 5Unit cost at hospitals versus healthcare centers/clinics.
Fig 6Potential impact of task shifting on clinical labor costs.
Fig 7Demand creation by major cost category.