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Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting

BACKGROUND: Uganda aims to provide safe male circumcision (SMC) to 80% of men ages 15–49 by 2016. To date, only 2 million men have received SMC of the 4.2 million men required. In response to age and regional trends in SMC uptake, the country sought to re-examine its targets with respect to age and...

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Autores principales: Kripke, Katharine, Vazzano, Andrea, Kirungi, William, Musinguzi, Joshua, Opio, Alex, Ssempebwa, Rhobbinah, Nakawunde, Susan, Kyobutungi, Sheila, Akao, Juliet N., Magala, Fred, Mwidu, George, Castor, Delivette, Njeuhmeli, Emmanuel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27410234
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158693
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author Kripke, Katharine
Vazzano, Andrea
Kirungi, William
Musinguzi, Joshua
Opio, Alex
Ssempebwa, Rhobbinah
Nakawunde, Susan
Kyobutungi, Sheila
Akao, Juliet N.
Magala, Fred
Mwidu, George
Castor, Delivette
Njeuhmeli, Emmanuel
author_facet Kripke, Katharine
Vazzano, Andrea
Kirungi, William
Musinguzi, Joshua
Opio, Alex
Ssempebwa, Rhobbinah
Nakawunde, Susan
Kyobutungi, Sheila
Akao, Juliet N.
Magala, Fred
Mwidu, George
Castor, Delivette
Njeuhmeli, Emmanuel
author_sort Kripke, Katharine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Uganda aims to provide safe male circumcision (SMC) to 80% of men ages 15–49 by 2016. To date, only 2 million men have received SMC of the 4.2 million men required. In response to age and regional trends in SMC uptake, the country sought to re-examine its targets with respect to age and subnational region, to assess the program’s progress, and to refine the implementation approach. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The Decision Makers’ Program Planning Tool, Version 2.0 (DMPPT 2.0), was used in conjunction with incidence projections from the Spectrum/AIDS Impact Module (AIM) to conduct this analysis. Population, births, deaths, and HIV incidence and prevalence were used to populate the model. Baseline male circumcision prevalence was derived from the 2011 AIDS Indicator Survey. Uganda can achieve the most immediate impact on HIV incidence by circumcising men ages 20–34. This group will also require the fewest circumcisions for each HIV infection averted. Focusing on men ages 10–19 will offer the greatest impact over a 15-year period, while focusing on men ages 15–34 offers the most cost-effective strategy over the same period. A regional analysis showed little variation in cost-effectiveness of scaling up SMC across eight regions. Scale-up is cost-saving in all regions. There is geographic variability in program progress, highlighting two regions with low baseline rates of circumcision where additional efforts will be needed. CONCLUSION: Focusing SMC efforts on specific age groups and regions may help to accelerate Uganda’s SMC program progress. Policy makers in Uganda have already used model outputs in planning efforts, proposing males ages 10–34 as a priority group for SMC in the 2014 application to the Global Fund’s new funding model. As scale-up continues, the country should also consider a greater effort to expand SMC in regions with low MC prevalence.
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spelling pubmed-49436282016-08-01 Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting Kripke, Katharine Vazzano, Andrea Kirungi, William Musinguzi, Joshua Opio, Alex Ssempebwa, Rhobbinah Nakawunde, Susan Kyobutungi, Sheila Akao, Juliet N. Magala, Fred Mwidu, George Castor, Delivette Njeuhmeli, Emmanuel PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Uganda aims to provide safe male circumcision (SMC) to 80% of men ages 15–49 by 2016. To date, only 2 million men have received SMC of the 4.2 million men required. In response to age and regional trends in SMC uptake, the country sought to re-examine its targets with respect to age and subnational region, to assess the program’s progress, and to refine the implementation approach. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The Decision Makers’ Program Planning Tool, Version 2.0 (DMPPT 2.0), was used in conjunction with incidence projections from the Spectrum/AIDS Impact Module (AIM) to conduct this analysis. Population, births, deaths, and HIV incidence and prevalence were used to populate the model. Baseline male circumcision prevalence was derived from the 2011 AIDS Indicator Survey. Uganda can achieve the most immediate impact on HIV incidence by circumcising men ages 20–34. This group will also require the fewest circumcisions for each HIV infection averted. Focusing on men ages 10–19 will offer the greatest impact over a 15-year period, while focusing on men ages 15–34 offers the most cost-effective strategy over the same period. A regional analysis showed little variation in cost-effectiveness of scaling up SMC across eight regions. Scale-up is cost-saving in all regions. There is geographic variability in program progress, highlighting two regions with low baseline rates of circumcision where additional efforts will be needed. CONCLUSION: Focusing SMC efforts on specific age groups and regions may help to accelerate Uganda’s SMC program progress. Policy makers in Uganda have already used model outputs in planning efforts, proposing males ages 10–34 as a priority group for SMC in the 2014 application to the Global Fund’s new funding model. As scale-up continues, the country should also consider a greater effort to expand SMC in regions with low MC prevalence. Public Library of Science 2016-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4943628/ /pubmed/27410234 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158693 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kripke, Katharine
Vazzano, Andrea
Kirungi, William
Musinguzi, Joshua
Opio, Alex
Ssempebwa, Rhobbinah
Nakawunde, Susan
Kyobutungi, Sheila
Akao, Juliet N.
Magala, Fred
Mwidu, George
Castor, Delivette
Njeuhmeli, Emmanuel
Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting
title Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting
title_full Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting
title_fullStr Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting
title_short Modeling the Impact of Uganda’s Safe Male Circumcision Program: Implications for Age and Regional Targeting
title_sort modeling the impact of uganda’s safe male circumcision program: implications for age and regional targeting
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27410234
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158693
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