| Literature DB >> 29557854 |
Sergio Torres-Rueda1, Mwita Wambura2, Helen A Weiss3, Marya Plotkin4,5, Katharine Kripke6, Joseph Chilongani2,7, Hally Mahler4,8, Evodius Kuringe2, Maende Makokha4, Augustino Hellar4, Carl Schutte9, Kokuhumbya J Kazaura10, Daimon Simbeye10, Gerry Mshana2, Natasha Larke3, Gissenge Lija11, John Changalucha2, Anna Vassall1, Richard Hayes3, Jonathan M Grund12,13, Fern Terris-Prestholt1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) reduces the risk of HIV acquisition, demand for services is lower among men in most at-risk age groups (ages 20-34 years). A randomized controlled trial was conducted to assess the effectiveness of locally-tailored demand creation activities (including mass media, community mobilization, and targeted service delivery) in increasing uptake of campaign-delivered VMMC among men aged 20-34 years. We conducted an economic evaluation to understand the intervention's cost and cost-effectiveness.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29557854 PMCID: PMC6012046 DOI: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000001682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr ISSN: 1525-4135 Impact factor: 3.731
Breakdown of Average Cluster Costs by Region and Arm (USD and %)
FIGURE 1.Plot graph of average cost per VMMC per cluster. The graph shows the average cost per VMMC per cluster (unit cost) plotted against the number of VMMCs per cluster. The data suggest that unit costs decrease as the number of VMMCs per cluster increases.
Effectiveness: HIV Infections Averted, DALYs Averted, and Costs
FIGURE 2.Incremental cost-effectiveness plane. The 2 squares denote the ICERs for both study regions. Their position in the South-East quadrant suggests that the intervention dominates the control because it is both less costly and more effective.
FIGURE 3.Tornado diagrams of the percentage changes in the base–case ICER (including averted costs of ART) from a deterministic 1-way analysis of key input variables per region. (1) Light blue bars show the direction and magnitude of change of the ICER when the input is at its minimum value. Conversely, dark blue bars show the direction and magnitude of change of the ICER when the input is at its maximum value. (2) Base case assumptions of parameters: ART costs: $515; ART coverage: 70%; time horizon for infections averted: 15 years; disability weights: HIV symptomatic pre-AIDS 0.274 (0.184–0.377), HIV/AIDS receiving ART 0.078 (0.052–0.111); AIDS: not receiving ART 0.582 (0.406–0.743); per diems demand creation: peer promoter $21 USD, auxiliary peer promoter $11 USD; surgical supplies costs (consumables): Tabora $24,431 (control) and $35,164 (intervention), Njombe $8070 (control) and $14,207 (intervention); clinical staff wages: $7938 USD; TSH to US dollar exchange rate: 2130 TSH:$1 USD; working days per year: 191. (3) The dotted line indicates the point at which the ICER goes from being cost-saving (left) to not cost-saving (right).