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Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis

INTRODUCTION: In 2016, under its new National Adherence Guidelines (AGL), South Africa formalized an existing model of fast-track HIV treatment initiation counselling (FTIC). Rollout of the AGL included an evaluation study at 24 clinics, with staggered AGL implementation. Using routinely collected d...

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Autores principales: Larson, Bruce A., Pascoe, Sophie J. S., Huber, Amy, Long, Lawrence C., Murphy, Joshua, Miot, Jacqui, Fraser-Hurt, Nicole, Fox, Matthew P., Rosen, Sydney
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7971492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33735206
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248551
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author Larson, Bruce A.
Pascoe, Sophie J. S.
Huber, Amy
Long, Lawrence C.
Murphy, Joshua
Miot, Jacqui
Fraser-Hurt, Nicole
Fox, Matthew P.
Rosen, Sydney
author_facet Larson, Bruce A.
Pascoe, Sophie J. S.
Huber, Amy
Long, Lawrence C.
Murphy, Joshua
Miot, Jacqui
Fraser-Hurt, Nicole
Fox, Matthew P.
Rosen, Sydney
author_sort Larson, Bruce A.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In 2016, under its new National Adherence Guidelines (AGL), South Africa formalized an existing model of fast-track HIV treatment initiation counselling (FTIC). Rollout of the AGL included an evaluation study at 24 clinics, with staggered AGL implementation. Using routinely collected data extracted as part of the evaluation study, we estimated and compared the costs of HIV care and treatment from the provider’s perspective at the 12 clinics implementing the new, formalized model (AGL-FTIC) to costs at the 12 clinics continuing to implement some earlier, less formalized, model that likely varied across clinics (denoted here as early-FTIC). METHODS: This was a cost-outcome analysis using standard methods and a composite outcome defined as initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) within 30 days of treatment eligibility and retained in care at 9 months. Using patient-level, bottom-up resource-utilization data and local unit costs, we estimated patient-level costs of care and treatment in 2017 U.S. dollars over the 9-month evaluation follow-up period for the two models of care. Resource use and costs, disaggregated by antiretroviral medications, laboratory tests, and clinic visits, are reported by model of care and stratified by the composite outcome. RESULTS: A total of 350/343 patients in the early-FTIC/AGL-FTIC models of care are included in this analysis. Mean/median costs were similar for both models of care ($135/$153 for early-FTIC, $130/$151 for AGL-FTIC). For the subset achieving the composite outcome, resource use and therefore mean/median costs were similar but slightly higher, reflecting care consistent with treatment guidelines ($163/$166 for early-FTIC, $168/$170 for AGL-FTIC). Not surprisingly, costs for patients not achieving the composite outcome were substantially less, mainly because they only had two or fewer follow-up visits and, therefore, received substantially less ART than patients who achieved the composite outcome. CONCLUSION: The 2016 adherence guidelines clarified expectations for the content and timing of adherence counseling sessions in relation to ART initiation. Because clinics were already initiating patients on ART quickly by 2016, little room existed for the new model of fast-track initiation counseling to reduce the number of pre-ART clinic visits at the study sites and therefore to reduce costs of care and treatment. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical Trial Number: NCT02536768.
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spelling pubmed-79714922021-03-31 Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis Larson, Bruce A. Pascoe, Sophie J. S. Huber, Amy Long, Lawrence C. Murphy, Joshua Miot, Jacqui Fraser-Hurt, Nicole Fox, Matthew P. Rosen, Sydney PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: In 2016, under its new National Adherence Guidelines (AGL), South Africa formalized an existing model of fast-track HIV treatment initiation counselling (FTIC). Rollout of the AGL included an evaluation study at 24 clinics, with staggered AGL implementation. Using routinely collected data extracted as part of the evaluation study, we estimated and compared the costs of HIV care and treatment from the provider’s perspective at the 12 clinics implementing the new, formalized model (AGL-FTIC) to costs at the 12 clinics continuing to implement some earlier, less formalized, model that likely varied across clinics (denoted here as early-FTIC). METHODS: This was a cost-outcome analysis using standard methods and a composite outcome defined as initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) within 30 days of treatment eligibility and retained in care at 9 months. Using patient-level, bottom-up resource-utilization data and local unit costs, we estimated patient-level costs of care and treatment in 2017 U.S. dollars over the 9-month evaluation follow-up period for the two models of care. Resource use and costs, disaggregated by antiretroviral medications, laboratory tests, and clinic visits, are reported by model of care and stratified by the composite outcome. RESULTS: A total of 350/343 patients in the early-FTIC/AGL-FTIC models of care are included in this analysis. Mean/median costs were similar for both models of care ($135/$153 for early-FTIC, $130/$151 for AGL-FTIC). For the subset achieving the composite outcome, resource use and therefore mean/median costs were similar but slightly higher, reflecting care consistent with treatment guidelines ($163/$166 for early-FTIC, $168/$170 for AGL-FTIC). Not surprisingly, costs for patients not achieving the composite outcome were substantially less, mainly because they only had two or fewer follow-up visits and, therefore, received substantially less ART than patients who achieved the composite outcome. CONCLUSION: The 2016 adherence guidelines clarified expectations for the content and timing of adherence counseling sessions in relation to ART initiation. Because clinics were already initiating patients on ART quickly by 2016, little room existed for the new model of fast-track initiation counseling to reduce the number of pre-ART clinic visits at the study sites and therefore to reduce costs of care and treatment. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical Trial Number: NCT02536768. Public Library of Science 2021-03-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7971492/ /pubmed/33735206 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248551 Text en © 2021 Larson 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Larson, Bruce A.
Pascoe, Sophie J. S.
Huber, Amy
Long, Lawrence C.
Murphy, Joshua
Miot, Jacqui
Fraser-Hurt, Nicole
Fox, Matthew P.
Rosen, Sydney
Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis
title Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis
title_full Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis
title_fullStr Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis
title_full_unstemmed Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis
title_short Fast-track treatment initiation counselling in South Africa: A cost-outcomes analysis
title_sort fast-track treatment initiation counselling in south africa: a cost-outcomes analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7971492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33735206
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248551
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