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Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation

Maternal syphilis results in an estimated 500,000 stillbirths and neonatal deaths annually in Sub-Saharan Africa. Despite the existence of national guidelines for antenatal syphilis screening, syphilis testing is often limited by inadequate laboratory and staff services. Recent availability of inexp...

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Autores principales: Shelley, Katharine D., Ansbro, Éimhín M., Ncube, Alexander Tshaka, Sweeney, Sedona, Fleischer, Colette, Mumba, Grace Tembo, Gill, Michelle M., Strasser, Susan, Peeling, Rosanna W., Terris-Prestholt, Fern
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4430530/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25970443
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125675
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author Shelley, Katharine D.
Ansbro, Éimhín M.
Ncube, Alexander Tshaka
Sweeney, Sedona
Fleischer, Colette
Mumba, Grace Tembo
Gill, Michelle M.
Strasser, Susan
Peeling, Rosanna W.
Terris-Prestholt, Fern
author_facet Shelley, Katharine D.
Ansbro, Éimhín M.
Ncube, Alexander Tshaka
Sweeney, Sedona
Fleischer, Colette
Mumba, Grace Tembo
Gill, Michelle M.
Strasser, Susan
Peeling, Rosanna W.
Terris-Prestholt, Fern
author_sort Shelley, Katharine D.
collection PubMed
description Maternal syphilis results in an estimated 500,000 stillbirths and neonatal deaths annually in Sub-Saharan Africa. Despite the existence of national guidelines for antenatal syphilis screening, syphilis testing is often limited by inadequate laboratory and staff services. Recent availability of inexpensive rapid point-of-care syphilis tests (RST) can improve access to antenatal syphilis screening. A 2010 pilot in Zambia explored the feasibility of integrating RST within prevention of mother-to-child-transmission of HIV services. Following successful demonstration, the Zambian Ministry of Health adopted RSTs into national policy in 2011. Cost data from the pilot and 2012 preliminary national rollout were extracted from project records, antenatal registers, clinic staff interviews, and facility observations, with the aim of assessing the cost and quality implications of scaling up a successful pilot into a national rollout. Start-up, capital, and recurrent cost inputs were collected, including costs of extensive supervision and quality monitoring during the pilot. Costs were analysed from a provider’s perspective, incremental to existing antenatal services. Total and unit costs were calculated and a multivariate sensitivity analysis was performed. Our accompanying qualitative study by Ansbro et al. (2015) elucidated quality assurance and supervisory system challenges experienced during rollout, which helped explain key cost drivers. The average unit cost per woman screened during rollout ($11.16) was more than triple the pilot unit cost ($3.19). While quality assurance costs were much lower during rollout, the increased unit costs can be attributed to several factors, including higher RST prices and lower RST coverage during rollout, which reduced economies of scale. Pilot and rollout cost drivers differed due to implementation decisions related to training, supervision, and quality assurance. This study explored the cost of integrating RST into antenatal care in pilot and national rollout settings, and highlighted important differences in costs that may be observed when moving from pilot to scale-up.
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spelling pubmed-44305302015-05-21 Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation Shelley, Katharine D. Ansbro, Éimhín M. Ncube, Alexander Tshaka Sweeney, Sedona Fleischer, Colette Mumba, Grace Tembo Gill, Michelle M. Strasser, Susan Peeling, Rosanna W. Terris-Prestholt, Fern PLoS One Research Article Maternal syphilis results in an estimated 500,000 stillbirths and neonatal deaths annually in Sub-Saharan Africa. Despite the existence of national guidelines for antenatal syphilis screening, syphilis testing is often limited by inadequate laboratory and staff services. Recent availability of inexpensive rapid point-of-care syphilis tests (RST) can improve access to antenatal syphilis screening. A 2010 pilot in Zambia explored the feasibility of integrating RST within prevention of mother-to-child-transmission of HIV services. Following successful demonstration, the Zambian Ministry of Health adopted RSTs into national policy in 2011. Cost data from the pilot and 2012 preliminary national rollout were extracted from project records, antenatal registers, clinic staff interviews, and facility observations, with the aim of assessing the cost and quality implications of scaling up a successful pilot into a national rollout. Start-up, capital, and recurrent cost inputs were collected, including costs of extensive supervision and quality monitoring during the pilot. Costs were analysed from a provider’s perspective, incremental to existing antenatal services. Total and unit costs were calculated and a multivariate sensitivity analysis was performed. Our accompanying qualitative study by Ansbro et al. (2015) elucidated quality assurance and supervisory system challenges experienced during rollout, which helped explain key cost drivers. The average unit cost per woman screened during rollout ($11.16) was more than triple the pilot unit cost ($3.19). While quality assurance costs were much lower during rollout, the increased unit costs can be attributed to several factors, including higher RST prices and lower RST coverage during rollout, which reduced economies of scale. Pilot and rollout cost drivers differed due to implementation decisions related to training, supervision, and quality assurance. This study explored the cost of integrating RST into antenatal care in pilot and national rollout settings, and highlighted important differences in costs that may be observed when moving from pilot to scale-up. Public Library of Science 2015-05-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4430530/ /pubmed/25970443 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125675 Text en © 2015 Shelley et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shelley, Katharine D.
Ansbro, Éimhín M.
Ncube, Alexander Tshaka
Sweeney, Sedona
Fleischer, Colette
Mumba, Grace Tembo
Gill, Michelle M.
Strasser, Susan
Peeling, Rosanna W.
Terris-Prestholt, Fern
Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation
title Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation
title_full Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation
title_fullStr Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation
title_full_unstemmed Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation
title_short Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation
title_sort scaling down to scale up: a health economic analysis of integrating point-of-care syphilis testing into antenatal care in zambia during pilot and national rollout implementation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4430530/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25970443
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125675
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