Multi-Country Analysis of Treatment Costs for HIV/AIDS (MATCH): Facility-Level ART Unit Cost Analysis in Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda, South Africa and Zambia

نویسندگان

  • Elya Tagar
  • Maaya Sundaram
  • Kate Condliffe
  • Blackson Matatiyo
  • Frank Chimbwandira
  • Ben Chilima
  • Robert Mwanamanga
  • Crispin Moyo
  • Bona Mukosha Chitah
  • Jean Pierre Nyemazi
  • Yibeltal Assefa
  • Yogan Pillay
  • Sam Mayer
  • Lauren Shear
  • Mary Dain
  • Raphael Hurley
  • Ritu Kumar
  • Thomas McCarthy
  • Parul Batra
  • Dan Gwinnell
  • Samantha Diamond
  • Mead Over
چکیده

BACKGROUND Today's uncertain HIV funding landscape threatens to slow progress towards treatment goals. Understanding the costs of antiretroviral therapy (ART) will be essential for governments to make informed policy decisions about the pace of scale-up under the 2013 WHO HIV Treatment Guidelines, which increase the number of people eligible for treatment from 17.6 million to 28.6 million. The study presented here is one of the largest of its kind and the first to describe the facility-level cost of ART in a random sample of facilities in Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda, South Africa and Zambia. METHODS & FINDINGS In 2010-2011, comprehensive data on one year of facility-level ART costs and patient outcomes were collected from 161 facilities, selected using stratified random sampling. Overall, facility-level ART costs were significantly lower than expected in four of the five countries, with a simple average of $208 per patient-year (ppy) across Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda and Zambia. Costs were higher in South Africa, at $682 ppy. This included medications, laboratory services, direct and indirect personnel, patient support, equipment and administrative services. Facilities demonstrated the ability to retain patients alive and on treatment at these costs, although outcomes for established patients (2-8% annual loss to follow-up or death) were better than outcomes for new patients in their first year of ART (77-95% alive and on treatment). CONCLUSIONS This study illustrated that the facility-level costs of ART are lower than previously understood in these five countries. While limitations must be considered, and costs will vary across countries, this suggests that expanded treatment coverage may be affordable. Further research is needed to understand investment costs of treatment scale-up, non-facility costs and opportunities for more efficient resource allocation.

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عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 9  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2014