Estimating the costs and perceived benefits of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery in ten counties of Kenya: a costing and a contingent valuation study.

IF 2.3 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Frontiers in reproductive health Pub Date : 2024-02-23 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frph.2024.1278764
Steven Forsythe, Urbanus Kioko, Guy Mahiane, Robert Glaubius, Abednego Musau, Anthony Gichangi, Jason Reed, Daniel Were
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Kenya included oral PrEP in the national guidelines as part of combination HIV prevention, and subsequently began providing PrEP to individuals who are at elevated risk of HIV infection in 2017. However, as scale-up continued, there was a recognized gap in knowledge on the cost of delivering oral PrEP. This gap limited the ability of the Government of Kenya to budget for its PrEP scale-up and to evaluate PrEP relative to other HIV prevention strategies. The following study calculated the actual costs of oral PrEP scale-up as it was being delivered in ten counties in Kenya. This costing also allowed for a comparison of various models of service delivery in different geographic regions from the perspective of service providers in Kenya. In addition, the analysis was also conducted to understand factors that indicate why some individuals place a greater value on PrEP than others, using a contingent valuation technique.

Methods: Data collection was completed between November 2017 and September 2018. Costing data was collected from 44 Kenyan health facilities, consisting of 23 public facilities, 5 private facilities and 16 drop-in centers (DICEs) through a cross-sectional survey in ten counties. Financial and programmatic data were collected from financial and asset records and through interviewer administered questionnaires. The costs associated with PrEP provision were calculated using an ingredients-based costing approach which involved identification and costing of all the economic inputs (both direct and indirect) used in PrEP service delivery. In addition, a contingent valuation study was conducted at the same 44 facilities to understand factors that reveal why some individuals place a greater value on PrEP than others. Interviews were conducted with 2,258 individuals (1,940 current PrEP clients and 318 non-PrEP clients). A contingent valuation method using a "payment card approach" was used to determine the maximum willingness to pay (WTP) of respondents regarding obtaining access to oral PrEP services.

Results: The weighted cost of providing PrEP was $253 per person year, ranging from $217 at health centers to $283 at dispensaries. Drop-in centers (DICEs), which served about two-thirds of the client volume at surveyed facilities, had a unit cost of $276. The unit cost was highest for facilities targeting MSM ($355), while it was lowest for those targeting FSW ($248). The unit cost for facilities targeting AGYW was $323 per person year. The largest percentage of costs were attributable to personnel (58.5%), followed by the cost of drugs, which represented 25% of all costs. The median WTP for PrEP was $2 per month (mean was $4.07 per month). This covers only one-third of the monthly cost of the medication (approximately $6 per month) and less than 10% of the full cost of delivering PrEP ($21 per month). A sizable proportion of current clients (27%) were unwilling to pay anything for PrEP. Certain populations put a higher value on PrEP services, including: FSW and MSM, Muslims, individuals with higher education, persons between the ages of 20 and 35, and households with a higher income and expenditures.

Discussion: This is the most recent and comprehensive study on the cost of PrEP delivery in Kenya. These results will be used in determining resource requirements and for resource mobilization to facilitate sustainable PrEP scale-up in Kenya and beyond. This contingent valuation study does have important implications for Kenya's PrEP program. First, it indicates that some populations are more motivated to adopt oral PrEP, as indicated by their higher WTP for the service. MSM and FSW, for example, placed a higher value on PrEP than AGYW. Higher educated individuals, in turn, put a much higher value on PrEP than those with less education (which may also reflect the higher "ability to pay" among those with more education). This suggests that any attempt to increase demand or improve PrEP continuation should consider these differences in client populations. Cost recovery from existing PrEP clients would have potentially negative consequences for uptake and continuation.

估算肯尼亚十个县提供口服暴露前预防疗法(PrEP)的成本和预期收益:成本计算和或有估值研究。
背景:肯尼亚将口服 PrEP 作为艾滋病综合预防的一部分纳入国家指导方针,随后于 2017 年开始向艾滋病感染风险较高的个人提供 PrEP。然而,随着规模的不断扩大,在提供口服 PrEP 的成本方面存在公认的知识差距。这一差距限制了肯尼亚政府为扩大 PrEP 规模编制预算的能力,也限制了肯尼亚政府评估 PrEP 与其他艾滋病毒预防策略相比的能力。以下研究计算了在肯尼亚十个县推广口服 PrEP 的实际成本。通过成本计算,还可以从肯尼亚服务提供者的角度对不同地理区域的各种服务提供模式进行比较。此外,还利用或有估值技术进行了分析,以了解表明为何一些人比其他人更重视 PrEP 的因素:数据收集工作于 2017 年 11 月至 2018 年 9 月期间完成。通过在 10 个县进行横断面调查,从 44 家肯尼亚医疗机构(包括 23 家公共医疗机构、5 家私营医疗机构和 16 家救助中心 (DICE))收集了成本计算数据。财务和项目数据通过财务和资产记录以及访谈人员发放的调查问卷收集。与提供 PrEP 相关的成本采用基于成分的成本计算方法进行计算,该方法涉及对 PrEP 服务中使用的所有经济投入(包括直接投入和间接投入)进行识别和成本计算。此外,还在同样的 44 家机构开展了一项或有估值研究,以了解揭示某些人比其他人更重视 PrEP 的原因。对 2,258 人进行了访谈(1,940 名 PrEP 现有客户和 318 名非 PrEP 客户)。采用 "支付卡法 "的或然估价法确定受访者对获得口服 PrEP 服务的最大支付意愿(WTP):提供 PrEP 的加权成本为每人每年 253 美元,从保健中心的 217 美元到药房的 283 美元不等。在接受调查的医疗机构中,约有三分之二的服务对象选择了投宿中心(DICEs),其单位成本为 276 美元;针对男男性行为者(MSM)的医疗机构的单位成本最高(355 美元),而针对女性同性恋者(FSW)的医疗机构的单位成本最低(248 美元)。针对 AGYW 的机构的单位成本为每人每年 323 美元。人员成本所占比例最大(58.5%),其次是药物成本,占所有成本的 25%。PrEP 的 WTP 中位数为每月 2 美元(平均值为每月 4.07 美元)。这仅占每月药费(约 6 美元/月)的三分之一,不到 PrEP 全部费用(21 美元/月)的 10%。相当一部分现有客户(27%)不愿意为 PrEP 支付任何费用。某些人群更看重 PrEP 服务,包括讨论:这是关于肯尼亚 PrEP 服务成本的最新、最全面的研究。这些结果将用于确定资源需求和调动资源,以促进 PrEP 在肯尼亚及其他国家的可持续推广。这项或然估值研究对肯尼亚的 PrEP 计划具有重要意义。首先,它表明某些人群采用口服 PrEP 的积极性更高,这体现在他们对该服务的 WTP 更高。例如,男男性行为者(MSM)和女性外阴残割者(FSW)对 PrEP 的重视程度高于女性外阴残割者(AGYW)。反过来,教育程度较高的人对 PrEP 的重视程度也远远高于教育程度较低的人(这可能也反映了教育程度较高的人 "支付能力 "较强)。这表明,任何增加需求或改善 PrEP 持续性的尝试都应考虑到客户群体的这些差异。从现有的 PrEP 患者身上收回成本可能会对其接受率和持续率产生负面影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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