31 results on '"Terris-Prestholt Fern"'
Search Results
2. Health Economics Research on Non-surgical Biomedical HIV Prevention: Identifying Gaps and Proposing a Way Forward.
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Torres-Rueda, Sergio, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Gafos, Mitzy, Indravudh, Pitchaya Peach, Giddings, Rebecca, Bozzani, Fiammetta, Quaife, Matthew, Ghazaryan, Lusine, Mann, Carlyn, Osborne, Connie, Kavanagh, Matthew, Godfrey-Faussett, Peter, Medley, Graham, and Malhotra, Shelly
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MEDICAL economics , *HIV prevention , *ECONOMIC research , *EVIDENCE gaps , *MEDICAL research , *CONDOMS , *GENDER affirmation surgery - Abstract
Background and Objective: Although HIV prevention science has advanced over the last four decades, evidence suggests that prevention technologies do not always reach their full potential. Critical health economics evidence at appropriate decision-making junctures, particularly early in the development process, could help identify and address potential barriers to the eventual uptake of future HIV prevention products. This paper aims to identify key evidence gaps and propose health economics research priorities for the field of HIV non-surgical biomedical prevention. Methods: We used a mixed-methods approach with three distinct components: (i) three systematic literature reviews (costs and cost effectiveness, HIV transmission modelling and quantitative preference elicitation) to understand health economics evidence and gaps in the peer-reviewed literature; (ii) an online survey with researchers working in this field to capture gaps in yet-to-be published research (recently completed, ongoing and future); and (iii) a stakeholder meeting with key global and national players in HIV prevention, including experts in product development, health economics research and policy uptake, to uncover further gaps, as well as to elicit views on priorities and recommendations based on (i) and (ii). Results: Gaps in the scope of available health economics evidence were identified. Little research has been carried out on certain key populations (e.g. transgender people and people who inject drugs) and other vulnerable groups (e.g. pregnant people and people who breastfeed). Research is also lacking on preferences of community actors who often influence or enable access to health services among priority populations. Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis, which has been rolled out in many settings, has been studied in depth. However, research on newer promising technologies, such as long-acting pre-exposure prophylaxis formulations, broadly neutralising antibodies and multipurpose prevention technologies, is lacking. Interventions focussing on reducing intravenous and vertical transmission are also understudied. A disproportionate amount of evidence on low- and middle-income countries comes from two countries (South Africa and Kenya); evidence from other countries in sub-Saharan Africa as well as other low- and middle-income countries is needed. Further, data are needed on non-facility-based service delivery modalities, integrated service delivery and ancillary services. Key methodological gaps were also identified. An emphasis on equity and representation of heterogeneous populations was lacking. Research rarely acknowledged the complex and dynamic use of prevention technologies over time. Greater efforts are needed to collect primary data, quantify uncertainty, systematically compare the full range of prevention options available, and validate pilot and modelling data once interventions are scaled up. Clarity on appropriate cost-effectiveness outcome measures and thresholds is also lacking. Lastly, research often fails to reflect policy-relevant questions and approaches. Conclusions: Despite a large body of health economics evidence on non-surgical biomedical HIV prevention technologies, important gaps in the scope of evidence and methodology remain. To ensure that high-quality research influences key decision-making junctures and facilitates the delivery of prevention products in a way that maximises impact, we make five broad recommendations related to: improved study design, an increased focus on service delivery, greater community and stakeholder engagement, the fostering of an active network of partners across sectors and an enhanced application of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Implementation and resource needs for long-acting PrEP in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review.
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Castor, Delivette, Heck, Craig J., Quigee, Daniela, Telrandhe, Niharika Vasant, Kui, Kiran, Jiaxin Wu, Glickson, Elizabeth, Yohannes, Kibret, Rueda, Sergio Torres, Bozzani, Fiammetta, Meyers, Kathrine, Zucker, Jason, Deacon, Justine, Kripke, Katharine, Sobieszczyk, Magdalena E., Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Malati, Christine, Obermeyer, Chris, Dam, Anita, and Schwartz, Katie
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PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HEALTH information systems ,HIV prevention ,ELECTRONIC publications ,NEW product development - Abstract
Introduction: Several low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are preparing to introduce long-acting pre-exposure prophylaxis (LAP). Amid multiple pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) options and constrained funding, decision-makers could benefit from systematic implementation planning and aligned costs. We reviewed national costed implementation plans (CIPs) to describe relevant implementation inputs and activities (domains) for informing the costed rollout of LAP. We assessed how primary costing evidence aligned with those domains. Methods: We conducted a rapid review of CIPs for oral PrEP and family planning (FP) to develop a consensus of implementation domains, and a scoping review across nine electronic databases for publications on PrEP costing in LMICs between January 2010 and June 2022. We extracted cost data and assessed alignment with the implementation domains and the Global Health Costing Consortium principles. Results: We identified 15 implementation domains from four national PrEP plans and FP-CIP template; only six were in all sources. We included 66 full-text manuscripts, 10 reported LAP, 13 (20%) were primary cost studies-representing seven countries, and none of the 13 included LAP. The 13 primary cost studies included PrEP commodities (n = 12), human resources (n = 11), indirect costs (n = 11), other commodities (n = 10), demand creation (n = 9) and counselling (n = 9). Few studies costed integration into non-HIV services (n = 5), above site costs (n = 3), supply chains and logistics (n = 3) or policy and planning (n = 2), and none included the costs of target setting, health information system adaptations or implementation research. Cost units and outcomes were variable (e.g. average per person-year). Discussion: LAP planning will require updating HIV prevention policies, technical assistance for logistical and clinical support, expanding beyond HIV platforms, setting PrEP achievement targets overall and disaggregated by method, extensive supply chain and logistics planning and support, as well as updating health information systems to monitor multiple PrEP methods with different visit schedules. The 15 implementation domains were variable in reviewed studies. PrEP primary cost and budget data are necessary for new product introduction and should match implementation plans with financing. Conclusions: As PrEP services expand to include LAP, decision-makers need a framework, tools and a process to support countries in planning the systematic rollout and costing for LAP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Infectious Disease Modelling of HIV Prevention Interventions: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis of Compartmental Models.
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Giddings, Rebecca, Indravudh, Pitchaya, Medley, Graham F., Bozzani, Fiammetta, Gafos, Mitzy, Malhotra, Shelly, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Torres-Rueda, Sergio, and Quaife, Matthew
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HIV prevention ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,CIRCUMCISION ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,DATA extraction - Abstract
Background: The HIV epidemic remains a major public health problem. Critical to transmission control are HIV prevention strategies with new interventions continuing to be developed. Mathematical models are important for understanding the potential impact of these interventions and supporting policy decisions. This systematic review aims to answer the following question: when a new HIV prevention intervention is being considered or designed, what information regarding it is necessary to include in a compartmental model to provide useful insights to policy makers? The primary objective of this review is therefore to assess suitability of current compartmental HIV prevention models for informing policy development. Methods: Articles published in EMBASE, Medline, Econlit, and Global Health were screened. Included studies were identified using permutations of (i) HIV, (ii) pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), circumcision (both voluntary male circumcision [VMMC] and early-infant male circumcision [EIMC]), and vaccination, and (iii) modelling. Data extraction focused on study design, model structure, and intervention incorporation into models. Article quality was assessed using the TRACE (TRAnsparent and Comprehensive Ecological modelling documentation) criteria for mathematical models. Results: Of 837 articles screened, 48 articles were included in the review, with 32 unique mathematical models identified. The substantial majority of studies included PrEP (83%), whilst fewer modelled circumcision (54%), and only a few focussed on vaccination (10%). Data evaluation, implementation verification, and model output corroboration were identified as areas of poorer model quality. Parameters commonly included in the mathematical models were intervention uptake and effectiveness, with additional intervention-specific common parameters identified. We identified key modelling gaps; critically, models insufficiently incorporate multiple interventions acting simultaneously. Additionally, population subgroups were generally poorly represented—with future models requiring improved incorporation of ethnicity and sexual risk group stratification—and many models contained inappropriate data in parameterisation which will affect output accuracy. Conclusions: This review identified gaps in compartmental models to date and suggests areas of improvement for models focusing on new prevention interventions. Resolution of such gaps within future models will ensure greater robustness and transparency, and enable more accurate assessment of the impact that new interventions may have, thereby providing more meaningful guidance to policy makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Costs and Cost-Effectiveness of Biomedical, Non-Surgical HIV Prevention Interventions: A Systematic Literature Review.
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Bozzani, Fiammetta M., Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Quaife, Matthew, Gafos, Mitzy, Indravudh, Pitchaya P., Giddings, Rebecca, Medley, Graham F., Malhotra, Shelly, and Torres-Rueda, Sergio
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PRE-exposure prophylaxis , *HIV prevention , *CONDOMS , *COST effectiveness , *HIV , *AIDS vaccines , *EVIDENCE gaps - Abstract
Background: Considerable evidence on the costs and cost-effectiveness of biomedical, non-surgical interventions to prevent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission has been generated over the last decade. This study aims to synthesize findings and identify remaining knowledge gaps to suggest future research priorities. Methods: A systematic literature review was carried out in August 2020 using the MEDLINE, Embase, Global Health and EconLit databases to retrieve economic evaluations and costing studies of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), injectable long-acting PrEP, vaginal microbicide rings and gels, HIV vaccines and broadly neutralizing antibodies. Studies reporting costs from the provider or societal perspective were included in the analysis. Those reporting on behavioural methods of prevention, condoms and surgical approaches (voluntary medical male circumcision) were excluded. The quality of reporting of the included studies was assessed using published checklists. Results: We identified 3007 citations, of which 87 studies were retained. Most were set in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs; n = 53) and focused on the costs and/or cost-effectiveness of oral PrEP regimens (n = 70). Model-based economic evaluations were the most frequent study design; only two trial-based cost-effectiveness analyses and nine costing studies were found. Less than half of the studies provided practical details on how the intervention would be delivered by the health system, and only three of these, all in LMICs, explicitly focused on service integration and its implication for delivery costs. 'Real-world' programme delivery mechanisms and costs of intervention delivery were rarely considered. PrEP technologies were generally found to be cost-effective only when targeting high-risk subpopulations. Single-dose HIV vaccines are expected to be cost-effective for all groups despite substantial uncertainty around pricing. Conclusions: A lack of primary, detailed and updated cost data, including above-service level costs, from a variety of settings makes it difficult to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of specific delivery modes at scale, or to evaluate strategies for services integration. Closing this evidence gap around real-world implementation is vital, not least because the strategies targeting high-risk groups that are recommended by PrEP models may incur substantially higher costs and be of limited practical feasibility in some settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Modelling the effect of market forces on the impact of introducing HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers
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Quaife, Matthew, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Mukandavire, Zindoga, and Vickerman, Peter
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South Africa ,HIV prevention ,virus diseases ,economics of sex work ,pre‐exposure prophylaxis ,transmission model - Abstract
Pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) enables female sex workers (FSWs) to protect themselves from HIV without relying on clients using condoms. Yet, because PrEP reduces HIV risk, financial incentives to not use condoms may lead to risk compensation: reductions in condom use and/or increases in commercial sex, and may reduce the price of unprotected sex. In this analysis, we integrate market forces into a dynamic HIV transmission model to assess how risk compensation could change the impact of PrEP among FSWs and clients. We parameterise how sexual behavior may change with PrEP use among FSWs using stated preference data combined with economic theory. Our projections suggest the impact of PrEP is sensitive to risk compensatory behaviors driven by changes in the economics of sex work. Condom substitution could reduce the impact of PrEP on HIV incidence by 55%, while increases in the frequency of commercial sex to counter decreases in the price charged for unprotected sex among PrEP users could entirely mitigate the impact of PrEP. Accounting for competition between PrEP users and nonusers exacerbates this further. Alternative scenarios where increases in unprotected sex among PrEP users are balanced by decreases in non‐PrEP users have the opposite effect, resulting in PrEP having much greater impact. Intervention studies need to determine how HIV prevention products may change the economics of sex work and provision of unprotected sex to enable a better understanding of their impact.
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- 2020
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7. Efficiency in PrEP Delivery: Estimating the Annual Costs of Oral PrEP in Zimbabwe.
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Mangenah, Collin, Nhamo, Definate, Gudukeya, Stephano, Gwavava, Emily, Gavi, Chiedza, Chiwawa, Progress, Chidawanyika, Sandra, Muleya, Polite, Taruberekera, Noah, Madidi, Ngonidzashe, Ncube, Gertrude, Bara, Hilda, Napierala, Sue, Dunbar, Megan, Hoke, Theresa, Kripke, Katharine, Cowan, Frances M., Torjesen, Kristine, and Terris-Prestholt, Fern
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HIV prevention ,ORAL drug administration ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Although oral PrEP is highly effective at preventing HIV acquisition, optimizing continuation among beneficiaries is challenging in many settings. We estimated the costs of delivering oral PrEP to populations at risk of HIV in seven clinics in Zimbabwe. Full annual economic costs of oral PrEP initiations and continuation visits were estimated from the providers' perspective for a six-clinic NGO network and one government SGBV clinic in Zimbabwe (January–December 2018). Disaggregating costs of full initiation and incremental follow-up visits enabled modeling of the impact of duration of continuation on the cost per person-year ($pPY) on PrEP. 4677 people initiated oral PrEP, averaging 2.7 follow-up visits per person. Average cost per person initiated was $238 ($183–$302 across the NGO clinics; $86 in the government facility). The full cost per initiation visit, including central and direct costs, was $178, and the incremental cost per follow-up visit, capturing only additional resources used directly in the follow up visits, was $22. The average duration of continuation was 3.0 months, generating an average $pPY of $943, ranging from $839 among adolescent girls and young women to $1219 in men. Oral PrEP delivery costs varied substantially by scale of initiations and by duration of continuation and type of clinic. Extending the average oral PrEP continuation from 2.7 to 5 visits (about 6 months) would greatly improve service efficiency, cutting the $pPY by more than half. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. 'Too old to test?': A life course approach to HIV-related risk and self-testing among midlife-older adults in Malawi.
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Johnson, Cheryl, Kumwenda, Moses, Meghji, Jamilah, Choko, Augustine T., Phiri, Mackwellings, Hatzold, Karin, Baggaley, Rachel, Taegtmeyer, Miriam, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Desmond, Nicola, and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,HIV prevention ,PATIENT self-monitoring ,EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Background: Despite the aging HIV epidemic, increasing age can be associated with hesitancy to test. Addressing this gap is a critical policy concern and highlights the urgent need to identify the underlying factors, to improve knowledge of HIV-related risks as well as uptake of HIV testing and prevention services, in midlife-older adults.Methods: We conducted five focus group discussions and 12 in-depth interviews between April 2013 and November 2016 among rural and urban Malawian midlife-older (≥30 years) men and women. Using a life-course theoretical framework we explored how age is enacted socially and its implications on HIV testing and sexual risk behaviours. We also explore the potential for HIV self-testing (HIVST) to be part of a broader strategy for engaging midlife-older adults in HIV testing, prevention and care. Thematic analysis was used to identify recurrent themes and variations.Results: Midlife-older adults (30-74 years of age) associated their age with respectability and identified HIV as "a disease of youth" that would not affect them, with age protecting them against infidelity and sexual risk-taking. HIV testing was felt to be stigmatizing, challenging age norms, threatening social status, and implying "lack of wisdom". These norms drove self-testing preferences at home or other locations deemed age and gender appropriate. Awareness of the potential for long-standing undiagnosed HIV to be carried forward from past relationships was minimal, as was understanding of treatment-as-prevention. These norms led to HIV testing being perceived as a threat to status by older adults, contributing to low levels of recent HIV testing compared to younger adults.Conclusions: Characteristics associated with age-gender norms and social position encourage self-testing but drive poor HIV-risk perception and unacceptability of conventional HIV testing in midlife-older adults. There is an urgent need to provide targeted messages and services more appropriate to midlife-older adults in sub-Saharan Africa. HIVST which has often been highlighted as a tool for reaching young people, may be a valuable tool for engaging midlife-older age groups who may not otherwise test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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9. Modelling the effect of market forces on the impact of introducing human immunodeficiency virus pre‐exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers.
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Quaife, Matthew, Terris‐Prestholt, Fern, Mukandavire, Zindoga, and Vickerman, Peter
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Pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) enables female sex workers (FSWs) to protect themselves from HIV without relying on clients using condoms. Yet, because PrEP reduces HIV risk, financial incentives to not use condoms may lead to risk compensation: reductions in condom use and/or increases in commercial sex, and may reduce the price of unprotected sex. In this analysis, we integrate market forces into a dynamic HIV transmission model to assess how risk compensation could change the impact of PrEP among FSWs and clients. We parameterise how sexual behavior may change with PrEP use among FSWs using stated preference data combined with economic theory. Our projections suggest the impact of PrEP is sensitive to risk compensatory behaviors driven by changes in the economics of sex work. Condom substitution could reduce the impact of PrEP on HIV incidence by 55%, while increases in the frequency of commercial sex to counter decreases in the price charged for unprotected sex among PrEP users could entirely mitigate the impact of PrEP. Accounting for competition between PrEP users and nonusers exacerbates this further. Alternative scenarios where increases in unprotected sex among PrEP users are balanced by decreases in non‐PrEP users have the opposite effect, resulting in PrEP having much greater impact. Intervention studies need to determine how HIV prevention products may change the economics of sex work and provision of unprotected sex to enable a better understanding of their impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. A qualitative study to identify critical attributes and attribute-levels for a discrete choice experiment on oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery among young people in Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa.
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Dietrich, Janan J., Atujuna, Millicent, Tshabalala, Gugulethu, Hornschuh, Stefanie, Mulaudzi, Mamakiri, Koh, Michelle, Ahmed, Nadia, Muhumuza, Richard, Ssemata, Andrew S., Otwombe, Kennedy, Bekker, Linda-Gail, Seeley, Janet, Martinson, Neil A., Terris-Prestholt, Fern, and Fox, Julie
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PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOUTH Africans ,DRUG administration ,SEMI-structured interviews ,HIV prevention ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,PREVENTIVE health services ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: The uptake and adherence of daily oral PrEP has been poor in high-risk populations in South Africa including young people. We used qualitative research methods to explore user preferences for daily and on-demand oral PrEP use among young South Africans, and to inform the identification of critical attributes and attribute-levels for quantitative analysis of user preferences, i.e. a discrete choice experiment (DCE).Methods: Data were collected between September and November 2018 from eight group discussions and 20 in-depth interviews with young people 13 to 24 years in Cape Town and Johannesburg. Using a convenience sampling strategy, participants were stratified by sex and age. Interviewers used a semi-structured interview guide to discuss several attributes (dosing regimen, location, costs, side effects, and protection period) for PrEP access and use. Group discussions and in-depth interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and translated to English. We used framework analysis to explore context-specific attributes and attribute-levels for delivering oral PrEP in South Africa. The adolescent community advisory board, expert and study team opinions were consulted for the final DCE attributes and levels.Results: We enrolled 74 participants who were 51% (n = 38/74) male, had a median age of 18.5 [Interquartile range = 16-21.25] years, 91% (n = 67/74) identified as heterosexual and 49% (n = 36/74) had not completed 12th grade education. Using the qualitative data, we identified five candidate attributes including (1) dosing regimen, (2) location to get PrEP, (3) cost, (4) route of administration and (5) frequency. After discussions with experts and the study team, we revised the DCE to include the following five attributes and levels: dosing regime: daily, and on-demand PrEP; location: private pharmacy, public clinic, mobile clinic, ATM); cost: free-of-charge, R50 (~2GBP), R265 (~12GBP); side effects: nausea, headache, rash; and duration of protection: fulltime protection versus when PrEP is used).Conclusions: There is limited literature on qualitative research methods describing the step-by-step process of developing a DCE for PrEP in adolescents, especially in resource-constrained countries. We provide the process followed for the DCE technique to understand user preferences for daily and on-demand oral PrEP among young people in South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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11. Estimating the contribution of key populations towards HIV transmission in South Africa.
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Stone, Jack, Mukandavire, Christinah, Boily, Marie‐Claude, Fraser, Hannah, Mishra, Sharmistha, Schwartz, Sheree, Rao, Amrita, Looker, Katharine J, Quaife, Matthew, Terris‐Prestholt, Fern, Marr, Alexander, Lane, Tim, Coetzee, Jenny, Gray, Glenda, Otwombe, Kennedy, Milovanovic, Minja, Hausler, Harry, Young, Katherine, Mcingana, Mfezi, and Ncedani, Manezi
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HIV infection transmission ,HIV infections ,MEN who have sex with men ,HIV prevention - Abstract
Introduction: In generalized epidemic settings, there is insufficient understanding of how the unmet HIV prevention and treatment needs of key populations (KPs), such as female sex workers (FSWs) and men who have sex with men (MSM), contribute to HIV transmission. In such settings, it is typically assumed that HIV transmission is driven by the general population. We estimated the contribution of commercial sex, sex between men, and other heterosexual partnerships to HIV transmission in South Africa (SA). Methods: We developed the "Key‐Pop Model"; a dynamic transmission model of HIV among FSWs, their clients, MSM, and the broader population in SA. The model was parameterized and calibrated using demographic, behavioural and epidemiological data from national household surveys and KP surveys. We estimated the contribution of commercial sex, sex between men and sex among heterosexual partnerships of different sub‐groups to HIV transmission over 2010 to 2019. We also estimated the efficiency (HIV infections averted per person‐year of intervention) and prevented fraction (% IA) over 10‐years from scaling‐up ART (to 81% coverage) in different sub‐populations from 2020. Results: Sex between FSWs and their paying clients, and between clients with their non‐paying partners contributed 6.9% (95% credibility interval 4.5% to 9.3%) and 41.9% (35.1% to 53.2%) of new HIV infections in SA over 2010 to 2019 respectively. Sex between low‐risk groups contributed 59.7% (47.6% to 68.5%), sex between men contributed 5.3% (2.3% to 14.1%) and sex between MSM and their female partners contributed 3.7% (1.6% to 9.8%). Going forward, the largest population‐level impact on HIV transmission can be achieved from scaling up ART to clients of FSWs (% IA = 18.2% (14.0% to 24.4%) or low‐risk individuals (% IA = 20.6% (14.7 to 27.5) over 2020 to 2030), with ART scale‐up among KPs being most efficient. Conclusions: Clients of FSWs play a fundamental role in HIV transmission in SA. Addressing the HIV prevention and treatment needs of KPs in generalized HIV epidemics is central to a comprehensive HIV response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Cost-Effectiveness of HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis Among Heterosexual Men in South Africa: A Cost-Utility Modeling Analysis.
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Vogelzang, Michelle, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Vickerman, Peter, Delany-Moretlwe, Sinead, Travill, Danielle, and Quaife, Matthew
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Introduction: Heterosexual men are not considered a key population in the HIV response and are mostly absent from pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) studies to date. Yet, South African men face considerable HIV risk. We estimate the incremental costeffectiveness of providing oral PrEP, injectable PrEP, or a combination of both to heterosexual South African men to assess whether providing PrEP would efficiently use resources. Methods: Epidemiological and costing models estimated the oneyear costs and outcomes associated with PrEP use in 3 scenarios. PrEP uptake was estimated for younger (aged 18-24) and older (aged 25-49) men using a discrete choice experiment. Scenarios were compared with a baseline scenario of male condom use, while a health system perspective was used to estimate discounted lifetime costs averted per HIV infection. PrEP benefit was estimated in disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) averted. Uncertainty around the estimated incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) was assessed using deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. Results: No PrEP intervention scenarios were cost-effective for both age groups at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $1175/DALY averted. The lowest ICER ($2873/DALY averted) was for the provision of oral PrEP to older men, although probability of costeffectiveness was just 0.26%. Results found that ICERs were sensitive to HIV incidence and antiretroviral coverage. Conclusions: This study estimates that providing PrEP to heterosexual South African men is not cost-effective at current costeffectiveness thresholds. Given the ICERs' sensitivity to several variables, alongside the heterogeneity of HIV infection among South African men, PrEP may be cost-effective for older men with high incidence and other subgroups based on locality and race. We recommend further investigation to better identify and target these groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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13. The effect of HIV prevention products on incentives to supply condomless commercial sex among female sex workers in South Africa.
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Quaife, Matthew, Vickerman, Peter, Manian, Shanthi, Eakle, Robyn, Cabrera‐Escobar, Maria A., Delany‐Moretlwe, Sinead, Terris‐Prestholt, Fern, Cabrera-Escobar, Maria A, Delany-Moretlwe, Sinead, and Terris-Prestholt, Fern
- Abstract
Evidence suggests that economic factors play an important role in commercial sex work, in particular that condomless sex commands a price premium relative to condom-protected sex. This paper explores whether the use of a new HIV prevention product, with 100% efficacy but modeled after pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), could change the price and quantity of condomless commercial sex supplied. We collected stated preference data from 122 HIV-negative female sex workers in urban South Africa, using a repeated choice experiment to simulate the impact of using PrEP on choices. Results suggest that the price premium for condomless sex would decrease by 73% with PrEP use and the quantity of condomless sex is predicted to increase by a factor of 2.27. Act price does not significantly affect choices without protection but strongly influences choices under full HIV protection. The utility offered by condoms reduces by around 15% under PrEP use. Because new HIV prevention products do not protect against other STIs or pregnancy, the unintended consequences of introducing HIV prevention products should be closely monitored, whereas users should not face stigma or blame for reacting rationally to exogenous changes to market conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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14. The cost of safe sex: estimating the price premium for unprotected sex during the Avahan HIV prevention programme in India.
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Quaife, Matthew, Lépine, Aurélia, Deering, Kathleen, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Beattie, Tara, Isac, Shajy, Paranjape, R S, and Vickerman, Peter
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UNSAFE sex ,SAFE sex ,HIV prevention ,SEXUAL intercourse ,BARGAINING power - Abstract
There is some evidence that female sex workers (FSWs) receive greater earnings for providing unprotected sex. In 2003, the landscape of the fight against HIV/AIDS dramatically changed in India with the introduction of Avahan, the largest HIV prevention programme implemented globally. Using a unique, cross-sectional bio-behavioural dataset from 3591 FSWs located in the four Indian states where Avahan was implemented, we estimate the economic loss faced by FSWs who always use condoms. We estimate the causal effect of condom use on the price charged during the last paid sexual intercourse using the random targeting of Avahan as an instrumental variable. Results indicate that FSWs who always use condoms face an income loss of 65% (INR125, US$2.60) per sex act compared to peers providing unprotected sex, consistent with our expectations. The main finding confirms that clients have a preference for unprotected sex and that policies aiming at changing clients' preferences and at improving the bargaining power of FSWs are required to limit the spread of HIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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15. No Place Like Home? Disentangling Preferences for HIV Testing Locations and Services Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in China.
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Pan, Stephen W., Durvasula, Maya, Ong, Jason J., Liu, Chuncheng, Tang, Weiming, Fu, Hongyun, Wei, Chongyi, Wang, Cheng, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, and Tucker, Joseph D.
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HIV prevention ,MEDICAL screening ,HOME environment ,MEN who have sex with men ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,AIDS serodiagnosis - Abstract
In China, some health departments and gay community-based organizations have begun to offer home-based HIV testing kits in order to augment test uptake among men who have sex with men (MSM). However, HIV test preferences and motivations for home-testing among MSM in China are not well understood. The HIV testing preferences of 803 MSM throughout China were evaluated using single-item assessment and a discrete choice experiment (DCE). In both the single-item assessment and DCE, participants expressed strong preference for free and anonymous testing by health professionals. Both approaches also indicated that naïve testers most prefer home testing. However, among previous testers, the single-item assessment indicated that "home" was the most preferred testing location (vs. hospital or clinic), while the DCE indicated that "home" was the least preferred testing location after controlling for anonymity. HIV home-testing may have limited appeal to previously tested Chinese MSM if anonymity is not maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. The cost‐effectiveness of multi‐purpose HIV and pregnancy prevention technologies in South Africa.
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Quaife, Matthew, Terris‐Prestholt, Fern, Eakle, Robyn, Cabrera Escobar, Maria A., Kilbourne‐Brook, Maggie, Mvundura, Mercy, Meyer‐Rath, Gesine, Delany‐Moretlwe, Sinead, and Vickerman, Peter
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HIV infections , *THERAPEUTICS , *ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *UNWANTED pregnancy , *COST effectiveness , *WOMEN , *PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Abstract: Introduction: A number of antiretroviral HIV prevention products are efficacious in preventing HIV infection. However, the sexual and reproductive health needs of many women extend beyond HIV prevention, and research is ongoing to develop multi‐purpose prevention technologies (MPTs) that offer dual HIV and pregnancy protection. We do not yet know if these products will be an efficient use of constrained health resources. In this paper, we estimate the cost‐effectiveness of combinations of candidate multi‐purpose prevention technologies (MPTs), in South Africa among general population women and female sex workers (FSWs). Methods: We combined a cost model with a static model of product impact based on incidence data in South Africa to estimate the cost‐effectiveness of five candidate co‐formulated or co‐provided MPTs: oral PrEP, intravaginal ring, injectable ARV, microbicide gel and SILCS diaphragm used in concert with gel. We accounted for the preferences of end‐users by predicting uptake using a discrete choice experiment (DCE). Product availability and protection were systematically varied in five potential rollout scenarios. The impact model estimated the number of infections averted through decreased incidence due to product use over one year. The comparator for each scenario was current levels of male condom use, while a health system perspective was used to estimate discounted lifetime treatment costs averted per HIV infection. Product benefit was estimated in disability‐adjusted life years (DALYs) averted. Benefits from contraception were incorporated through adjusting the uptake of these products based on the DCE and through estimating the costs averted from avoiding unwanted pregnancies. We explore the additional impact of STI protection through increased uptake in a sensitivity analysis. Results: At central incidence rates, all single‐ and multi‐purpose scenarios modelled were cost‐effective among FSWs and women aged 16–24, at a governmental willingness‐to‐pay threshold of $1175/DALY averted (range: $214–$810/DALY averted among non‐dominant scenarios), however, none were cost‐effective among women aged 25–49 (minimum $1706/DALY averted). The cost‐effectiveness of products improved with additional protection from pregnancy. Estimates were sensitive to variation in incidence assumptions, but robust to other parameters. Conclusions: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to estimate the cost‐effectiveness of a range of potential MPTs; suggesting that MPTs will be cost‐effective among higher incidence FSWs or young women, but not among lower incidence older women. More work is needed to make attractive MPTs available to potential users who could use them effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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17. Divergent Preferences for HIV Prevention: A Discrete Choice Experiment for Multipurpose HIV Prevention Products in South Africa.
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Quaife, Matthew, Eakle, Robyn, Cabrera Escobar, Maria A., Vickerman, Peter, Kilbourne-Brook, Maggie, Mvundura, Mercy, Delany-Moretlwe, Sinead, and Terris-Prestholt, Fern
- Abstract
Background. The development of antiretroviral (ARV)-based prevention products has the potential to substantially change the HIV prevention landscape; yet, little is known about how appealing these products will be outside of clinical trials, as compared with the existing options. Methods. We conducted a discrete choice experiment (DCE) to measure preferences for 5 new products among 4 important populations in the HIV response: adult men and women in the general population (aged 18 to 49 y), adolescent girls (aged 16 to 17 y), and self-identifying female sex workers (aged 18 to 49 y). We interviewed 661 self-reported HIV-negative participants in peri-urban South Africa, who were asked to choose between 3 unique, hypothetical products over 10 choice sets. Data were analyzed using multinomial, latent class and mixed multinomial logit models. Results. HIV protection was the most important attribute to respondents; however, results indicate significant demand among all groups for multipurpose prevention products that offer protection from HIV infection, other STIs, and unwanted pregnancy. All groups demonstrated a strong preference for long-lasting injectable products. There was substantial heterogeneity in preferences within and across population groups. Limitations. Hypothetical DCE data may not mirror real-world choices, and products will have more attributes in reality than represented in choice tasks. Background data on participants, including sensitive areas of HIV status and condom use, was self-reported. Conclusions. These results suggest that stimulating demand for new HIV prevention products may require a more a nuanced approach than simply developing highly effective products. No single product is likely to be equally attractive or acceptable across different groups. This study strengthens the call for effective and attractive multipurpose prevention products to be deployed as part of a comprehensive combination prevention strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. Costs of facility-based HIV testing in Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
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Mwenge, Lawrence, Sande, Linda, Mangenah, Collin, Ahmed, Nurilign, Kanema, Sarah, d’Elbée, Marc, Sibanda, Euphemia, Kalua, Thokozani, Ncube, Gertrude, Johnson, Cheryl C., Hatzold, Karin, Cowan, Frances M., Corbett, Elizabeth L., Ayles, Helen, Maheswaran, Hendramoorthy, and Terris-Prestholt, Fern
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,HIV infections ,THERAPEUTICS ,HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL care costs ,PUBLIC health ,COST analysis ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: Providing HIV testing at health facilities remains the most common approach to ensuring access to HIV treatment and prevention services for the millions of undiagnosed HIV-infected individuals in sub-Saharan Africa. We sought to explore the costs of providing these services across three southern African countries with high HIV burden. Methods: Primary costing studies were undertaken in 54 health facilities providing HIV testing services (HTS) in Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Routinely collected monitoring and evaluation data for the health facilities were extracted to estimate the costs per individual tested and costs per HIV-positive individual identified. Costs are presented in 2016 US dollars. Sensitivity analysis explored key drivers of costs. Results: Health facilities were testing on average 2290 individuals annually, albeit with wide variations. The mean cost per individual tested was US$5.03.9 in Malawi, US$4.24 in Zambia and US$8.79 in Zimbabwe. The mean cost per HIV-positive individual identified was US$79.58, US$73.63 and US$178.92 in Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe respectively. Both cost estimates were sensitive to scale of testing, facility staffing levels and the costs of HIV test kits. Conclusions: Health facility based HIV testing remains an essential service to meet HIV universal access goals. The low costs and potential for economies of scale suggests an opportunity for further scale-up. However low uptake in many settings suggests that demand creation or alternative testing models may be needed to achieve economies of scale and reach populations less willing to attend facility based services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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19. How to sell a condom? The impact of demand creation tools on male and female condom sales in resource limited settings.
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Terris-Prestholt, Fern and Windmeijer, Frank
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HIV prevention , *CONDOMS , *FEMALE condoms , *SOCIAL marketing , *CONDOM advertising , *INTERPERSONAL communication , *MARKETING , *PRICES - Abstract
Despite condoms being cheap and effective in preventing HIV, there remains an 8billion shortfall in condom use in risky sex-acts. Social marketing organisations apply private sector marketing approaches to sell public health products. This paper investigates the impact of marketing tools, including promotion and pricing, on demand for male and female condoms in 52 countries between 1997 and 2009. A static model differentiates drivers of demand between products, while a dynamic panel data estimator estimates their short- and long-run impacts. Products are not equally affected: female condoms are not affected by advertising, but highly affected by interpersonal communication and HIV prevalence. Price and promotion have significant short- and long-run effects, with female condoms far more sensitive to price than male condoms. The design of optimal distribution strategies for new and existing HIV prevention technologies must consider both product and target population characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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20. “If You Are Not Circumcised, I Cannot Say Yes”: The Role of Women in Promoting the Uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision in Tanzania.
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Osaki, Haika, Mshana, Gerry, Wambura, Mwita, Grund, Jonathan, Neke, Nyasule, Kuringe, Evodius, Plotkin, Marya, Mahler, Hally, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Weiss, Helen, and Changalucha, John
- Subjects
CIRCUMCISION ,HEALTH promotion ,HIV prevention ,PUBLIC health ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) for HIV prevention in Tanzania was introduced by the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare in 2010 as part of the national HIV prevention strategy. A qualitative study was conducted prior to a cluster randomized trial which tested effective strategies to increase VMMC up take among men aged ≥20 years. During the formative qualitative study, we conducted in-depth interviews with circumcised males (n = 14), uncircumcised males (n = 16), and participatory group discussions (n = 20) with men and women aged 20–49 years in Njombe and Tabora regions of Tanzania. Participants reported that mothers and female partners have an important influence on men’s decisions to seek VMMC both directly by denying sex, and indirectly through discussion, advice and providing information on VMMC to uncircumcised partners and sons. Our findings suggest that in Tanzania and potentially other settings, an expanded role for women in VMMC communication strategies could increase adult male uptake of VMMC services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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21. Determinants of HIV testing among Nigerian couples: a multilevel modelling approach.
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Lépine, Aurélia, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, and Vickerman, Peter
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,COUPLES ,HIV prevention ,SAFE sex ,PUBLIC health ,HUMAN sexuality - Abstract
Copyright of Health Policy & Planning is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
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22. Introduction of Syphilis Point-of-Care Tests, from Pilot Study to National Programme Implementation in Zambia: A Qualitative Study of Healthcare Workers’ Perspectives on Testing, Training and Quality Assurance.
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Ansbro, Éimhín M., Gill, Michelle M., Reynolds, Joanna, Shelley, Katharine D., Strasser, Susan, Sripipatana, Tabitha, Ncube, Alexander Tshaka, Tembo Mumba, Grace, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Peeling, Rosanna W., and Mabey, David
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of syphilis ,POINT-of-care testing ,PILOT projects ,QUALITATIVE research ,HIV prevention ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Syphilis affects 1.4 million pregnant women globally each year. Maternal syphilis causes congenital syphilis in over half of affected pregnancies, leading to early foetal loss, pregnancy complications, stillbirth and neonatal death. Syphilis is under-diagnosed in pregnant women. Point-of-care rapid syphilis tests (RST) allow for same-day treatment and address logistical barriers to testing encountered with standard Rapid Plasma Reagin testing. Recent literature emphasises successful introduction of new health technologies requires healthcare worker (HCW) acceptance, effective training, quality monitoring and robust health systems. Following a successful pilot, the Zambian Ministry of Health (MoH) adopted RST into policy, integrating them into prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV clinics in four underserved Zambian districts. We compare HCW experiences, including challenges encountered in scaling up from a highly supported NGO-led pilot to a large-scale MoH-led national programme. Questionnaires were administered through structured interviews of 16 HCWs in two pilot districts and 24 HCWs in two different rollout districts. Supplementary data were gathered via stakeholder interviews, clinic registers and supervisory visits. Using a conceptual framework adapted from health technology literature, we explored RST acceptance and usability. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics. Key themes in qualitative data were explored using template analysis. Overall, HCWs accepted RST as learnable, suitable, effective tools to improve antenatal services, which were usable in diverse clinical settings. Changes in training, supervision and quality monitoring models between pilot and rollout may have influenced rollout HCW acceptance and compromised testing quality. While quality monitoring was integrated into national policy and training, implementation was limited during rollout despite financial support and mentorship. We illustrate that new health technology pilot research can rapidly translate into policy change and scale-up. However, training, supervision and quality assurance models should be reviewed and strengthened as rollout of the Zambian RST programme continues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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23. Cost-effectiveness of tenofovir gel in urban South Africa: model projections of HIV impact and threshold product prices.
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Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Foss, Anna M., Cox, Andrew P., Heise, Lori, Meyer-Rath, Gesine, Delany-Moretlwe, Sinead, Mertenskoetter, Thomas, Rees, Helen, Vickerman, Peter, and Watts, Charlotte H.
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- *
TENOFOVIR , *HIV prevention , *BACTERICIDES , *DRUG dosage , *DISEASES in women , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background There is urgent need for effective HIV prevention methods that women can initiate. The CAPRISA 004 trial showed that a tenofovir-based vaginal microbicide had significant impact on HIV incidence among women. This study uses the trial findings to estimate the population-level impact of the gel on HIV and HSV-2 transmission, and price thresholds at which widespread product introduction would be as cost-effective as male circumcision in urban South Africa. Methods The estimated 'per sex-act' HIV and HSV-2 efficacies were imputed from CAPRISA 004. A dynamic HIV/STI transmission model, parameterised and fitted to Gauteng (HIV prevalence of 16.9% in 2008), South Africa, was used to estimate the impact of gel use over 15 years. Uptake was assumed to increase linearly to 30% over 10 years, with gel use in 72% of sexacts. Full economic programme and averted HIV treatment costs were modelled. Cost per DALY averted is estimated and a microbicide price that equalises its cost-effectiveness to that of male circumcision is estimated. Results Using plausible assumptions about product introduction, we predict that tenofovir gel use could lead to a 12.5% and 4.9% reduction in HIV and HSV-2 incidence respectively, by year 15. Microbicide introduction is predicted to be highly cost-effective (under $300 per DALY averted), though the dose price would need to be just $0.12 to be equally cost-effective as male circumcision. A single dose or highly effective (83% HIV efficacy per sex-act) regimen would allow for more realistic threshold prices ($0.25 and $0.33 per dose, respectively). Conclusions These findings show that an effective coitally-dependent microbicide could reduce HIV incidence by 12.5% in this setting, if current condom use is maintained. For microbicides to be in the range of the most cost-effective HIV prevention interventions, product costs will need to decrease substantially. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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24. How Much Demand for New HIV Prevention Technologies Can We Really Expect? Results from a Discrete Choice Experiment in South Africa.
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Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Hanson, Kara, MacPhail, Catherine, Vickerman, Peter, Rees, Helen, and Watts, Charlotte
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- *
HIV prevention , *BIOTECHNOLOGY , *DISCRETE choice models , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *EPIDEMICS , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: For the first time in the history of HIV, new bio-medical interventions have been shown to be effective in preventing HIV transmission. For these new HIV prevention technologies (NPTs) to have an impact on the epidemic, they must be widely used. This study uses a discrete choice experiment (DCE) to: understand the relative strength of women’s preferences for product characteristics, understand the implications for substitution away from male condoms, and inform realistic modelling of their potential impact and cost-effectiveness. Methods: A DCE was conducted among 1017 women in urban South Africa. Women were presented with choices between potential women’s NPTs (microbicides, diaphragm, female condom) and ‘what I did last time’ (use or not use a condom) with different HIV and pregnancy prevention effectiveness’ and prices. Choice probabilities are estimated using the nested logit model and used to predict uptake. Results: In this high HIV prevalence setting, HIV prevention effectiveness is the main driver of uptake followed by pregnancy prevention effectiveness. For example a microbicide with poor effectiveness would have niche appeal at just 11% predicted uptake, while a highly effective microbicide (95% effective against HIV and pregnancy) would have far wider appeal (56% predicted uptake). Though women who reported not using condoms were more likely to choose the NPTs, at current very high rates of male condom use in South Africa (60%), about half of microbicide uptake is projected to be among those currently not using condoms. Conclusions: Women are very interested in NPTs, especially if highly effective in preventing HIV and pregnancy. Women in greatest need were also most likely to switch to the new products. Where products are not yet available for distribution, proxy data, such as that generated by DCEs, can bring realism to overly optimistic uptake scenarios found in many current impact models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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25. Managing men: women's dilemmas about overt and covert use of barrier methods for HIV prevention.
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MacPhail, Catherine, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Kumaranayake, Lilani, Ngoako, Prudence, Watts, Charlotte, and Rees, Helen
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- *
HIV prevention , *BARRIER contraceptives , *FEMALE condoms , *DIAPHRAGM (Anatomy) , *BIRTH control , *CONTRACEPTION , *SOCIAL conditions of women , *MAN-woman relationships - Abstract
Women in sub-Saharan Africa are at high risk of HIV infection and may struggle to negotiate condom use. This has led to a focus on the development of female-controlled barrier methods such as the female condom, microbicides and the diaphragm. One of the advantages of such products is their contribution to female empowerment through attributes that make covert use possible. We used focus groups to discuss covert use of barrier methods with a sample of South African women aged 18-50 years from Eastern Johannesburg. Women's attitudes towards covert use of HIV prevention methods were influenced by the overarching themes of male dislike of HIV and pregnancy prevention methods, the perceived untrustworthiness of men and social interpretations of female faithfulness. Women's discussions ranged widely from overt to covert use of barrier methods for HIV prevention and were influenced by partner characteristics and previous experience with contraception and HIV prevention. The discussions indicate that challenging gender norms for HIV prevention can be achieved in quite subtle ways, in a manner that suits individual women's relationships and previous experiences with negotiation of either HIV or pregnancy prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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26. Using choice experiments to improve equity in access to socially marketed HIV prevention products.
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Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Mulatu, Abay, Quaife, Matthew, Gafos, Mitzy, Medley, Graham F., MacPhail, Catherine, and Hanson, Kara
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HIV prevention ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ADVERTISING media planning ,PRODUCT placement ,SOCIAL marketing ,DELIVERY of goods - Abstract
Designing strategies to introduce new HIV prevention technologies requires balancing equitable access with sustainable distribution, particularly in resource constrained settings with high HIV prevalence. This paper explores how knowledge of preference heterogeneity can guide the equitable targeting of HIV prevention products using differentiated advertising and product placement to balance increased access with sustainability. A discrete choice experiment elicited 1016 women's preferences for distribution of HIV prevention products in South Africa. Qualitative research guided the experimental design which considered distribution outlet, collection method, advertising message, and price. A range of choice models, including random parameters logit, latent class and latent class random parameters logit models, were compared for fit. A latent class model showed the best fit and distinguished two classes of women: Class 1 were significantly more likely to be cohabiting and unemployed, who preferred products advertised for HIV prevention distributed through clinics and were highly price sensitive. Class 2 significantly preferred distribution through pharmacies and advertising around women's empowerment, while price was not a key factor. This analysis suggests that equity in access to new products could be advanced through exploiting preference heterogeneity between groups. The identified groups can be then used to design social marketing differentiated distribution strategies. Distributing free products promoted for HIV prevention could discourage 'leakage' of highly subsidised products to women with some capacity to pay, while priced products marketed for women's empowerment through pharmacies could encourage cost recovery with minimal reductions in coverage among employed women. • Balancing equitable and sustainable access to public health products is challenging. • Social marketing tends to use qualitative methods for targeted product marketing. • Latent class models identify preference heterogeneity for market segmentation. • Choice modelling can optimise delivery of goods with positive externalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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27. HIV prevention is not all about HIV - using a discrete choice experiment among women to model how the uptake and effectiveness of HIV prevention products may also rely on pregnancy and STI protection.
- Author
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Vickerman, Peter, Quaife, Matthew, Kilbourne-Brook, Maggie, Mvundura, Mercy, Eakle, Robyn, and Terris-Prestholt, Fern
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HIV prevention ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,TEENAGE girls ,PREGNANCY ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis - Abstract
Introduction: In sub-Saharan Africa, considerable HIV-burden exists among women. Anti-retroviral (ARV) based prevention products could decrease this burden, and their uptake could be increased if they also protect against pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STI).Methods: A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was undertaken in South Africa (2015) through a household survey of adult females (n = 158) and adolescent girls (n = 204) who self-reported HIV-negative status. The DCE was used to project the uptake (percentage using product) of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), vaginal rings, and injectable long-lasting ARV agents among these women, and how uptake could depend on whether these products protect against pregnancy or STI acquisition. Uptake estimates were used to model how each product could decrease a women's HIV acquisition risk.Results: In adolescent women, there will be limited uptake (< 6% for any product) and impact (< 4% decrease in HIV acquisition risk) of new products unless they provide pregnancy protection, which could quadruple use and impact. Adult women have weaker preference for pregnancy protection, with moderate use (< 17% for each) and impact (< 14 percentage point decrease) if they only provide HIV protection. All women had highest preference for injectable ARVs, with oral PrEP having high preference if injectable ARVs are not available. Adult women will use the ring, but adolescent women will not. Importantly, even with three additional prevention products, all providing pregnancy and STI protection, > 14% of women will remain unprotected and > 31% of the baseline acquisition risk will remain.Conclusions: Incorporating multiple prevention components into new ARV-based prevention products may increase their uptake and impact among women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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28. Community-led delivery of HIV self-testing to improve HIV testing, ART initiation and broader social outcomes in rural Malawi: study protocol for a cluster-randomised trial.
- Author
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Indravudh, Pitchaya P., Fielding, Katherine, Kumwenda, Moses K., Nzawa, Rebecca, Chilongosi, Richard, Desmond, Nicola, Nyirenda, Rose, Johnson, Cheryl C., Baggaley, Rachel C., Hatzold, Karin, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
- Subjects
PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,RURAL health clinics ,HIV prevention ,HIV ,OLDER men ,WATERSHEDS - Abstract
Background: Prevention of new HIV infections is a critical public health issue. The highest HIV testing gaps are in men, adolescents 15-19 years old, and adults 40 years and older. Community-based HIV testing services (HTS) can contribute to increased testing coverage and early HIV diagnosis, with HIV self-testing (HIVST) strategies showing promise. Community-based strategies, however, are resource intensive, costly and not widely implemented. A community-led approach to health interventions involves supporting communities to plan and implement solutions to improve their health. This trial aims to determine if community-led delivery of HIVST can improve HIV testing uptake, ART initiation, and broader social outcomes in rural Malawi.Methods: The trial uses a parallel arm, cluster-randomised design with group village heads (GVH) and their defined catchment areas randomised (1:1) to community-led HIVST or continue with the standard of the care (SOC). As part of the intervention, informal community health cadres are supported to plan and implement a seven-day HIVST campaign linked to HIV treatment and prevention. Approximately 12 months after the initial campaign, intervention GVHs are randomised to lead a repeat HIVST campaign. The primary outcome includes the proportion of adolescents 15-19 years old who have tested for HIV in their lifetime. Secondary outcomes include recent testing in adults 40 years and older and men; ART initiation; knowledge of HIV prevention; and HIV testing stigma. Outcomes will be measured through cross-sectional surveys and clinic registers. Economic evaluation will determine the cost per person tested, cost per person diagnosed, and incremental cost effectiveness ratio.Discussion: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first trial to assess the effectiveness of community-led HTS, which has only recently been enabled by the introduction of HIVST. Community-led delivery of HIVST is a promising new strategy for providing periodic HIV testing to support HIV prevention in rural communities. Further, introduction of HIVST through a community-led framework seems particularly apt, with control over healthcare concurrently devolved to individuals and communities.Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov registry ( NCT03541382 ) registered 30 May 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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29. The promise of multipurpose pregnancy, STI, and HIV prevention.
- Author
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Quaife, Matthew, Terris-Prestholt, Fern, and Vickerman, Peter
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- *
HIV prevention , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *MEDICAL technology , *PREGNANCY complications , *DRUG development , *AIDS , *CONTRACEPTION , *HIV infections - Published
- 2017
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30. Using discrete choice experiments to inform the design of complex interventions.
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Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Neke, Nyasule, Grund, Jonathan M., Plotkin, Marya, Kuringe, Evodius, Osaki, Haika, Ong, Jason J., Tucker, Joseph D., Mshana, Gerry, Mahler, Hally, Weiss, Helen A., Wambura, Mwita, and VMMC study team
- Subjects
- *
HIV prevention , *CIRCUMCISION , *SOCIAL stigma , *WOMEN medical personnel , *DISCRETE choice models , *QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: Complex health interventions must incorporate user preferences to maximize their potential effectiveness. Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) quantify the strength of user preferences and identify preference heterogeneity across users. We present the process of using a DCE to supplement conventional qualitative formative research in the design of a demand creation intervention for voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) to prevent HIV in Tanzania.Methods: The VMMC intervention was designed within a 3-month formative phase. In-depth interviews (n = 30) and participatory group discussions (n = 20) sought to identify broad setting-specific barriers to and facilitators of VMMC among adult men. Qualitative results informed the DCE development, identifying the role of female partners, service providers' attitudes and social stigma. A DCE among 325 men in Njombe and Tabora, Tanzania, subsequently measured preferences for modifiable VMMC service characteristics. The final VMMC demand creation intervention design drew jointly on the qualitative and DCE findings.Results: While the qualitative research informed the community mobilization intervention, the DCE guided the specific VMMC service configuration. The significant positive utilities (u) for availability of partner counselling (u = 0.43, p < 0.01) and age-separated waiting areas (u = 0.21, p < 0.05) led to the provision of community information booths for partners and provision of age-separated waiting areas. The strong disutility of female healthcare providers (u = - 0.24, p < 0.01) led to re-training all providers on client-friendliness.Conclusion: This is, to our knowledge, the first study documenting how user preferences from DCEs can directly inform the design of a complex intervention. The use of DCEs as formative research may help increase user uptake and adherence to complex interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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31. Treating Curable Sexually Transmitted Infections to Prevent HIV in Africa.
- Author
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White, Richard G., Orroth, Kate K., Glynn, Judith R., Freeman, Esther E., Bakker, Roel, Habbema, J Dik F., Terris-Prestholt, Fern, Kumaranayake, Lilani, Buvé, Anne, and Hayes, Richard J
- Subjects
- *
SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *HIV prevention , *CIRCUMCISION , *AIDS - Abstract
The article studies the treatment of curable sexually transmitted infections (STI) to prevent HIV infection in Africa. It was found that curable STI interventions may remain cost-saving in populations with generalized HIV epidemics, particularly in populations with high-risk behaviors or low male circumcision rates.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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