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Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019

INTRODUCTION: Kenya started implementing voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) for HIV prevention in 2008 and adopted the use of decision makers program planning tool version 2 (DMPPT2) in 2016, to model the impact of circumcisions performed annually on the population prevalence of male circumc...

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Autores principales: Odoyo-June, Elijah, Davis, Stephanie, Owuor, Nandi, Laube, Catey, Wambua, Jonesmus, Musingila, Paul, Young, Peter W., Aoko, Appolonia, Agot, Kawango, Joseph, Rachael, Mwandi, Zebedee, Ojiambo, Vincent, Lucas, Todd, Toledo, Carlos, Wanyonyi, Ambrose
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8281999/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34264971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254140
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author Odoyo-June, Elijah
Davis, Stephanie
Owuor, Nandi
Laube, Catey
Wambua, Jonesmus
Musingila, Paul
Young, Peter W.
Aoko, Appolonia
Agot, Kawango
Joseph, Rachael
Mwandi, Zebedee
Ojiambo, Vincent
Lucas, Todd
Toledo, Carlos
Wanyonyi, Ambrose
author_facet Odoyo-June, Elijah
Davis, Stephanie
Owuor, Nandi
Laube, Catey
Wambua, Jonesmus
Musingila, Paul
Young, Peter W.
Aoko, Appolonia
Agot, Kawango
Joseph, Rachael
Mwandi, Zebedee
Ojiambo, Vincent
Lucas, Todd
Toledo, Carlos
Wanyonyi, Ambrose
author_sort Odoyo-June, Elijah
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Kenya started implementing voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) for HIV prevention in 2008 and adopted the use of decision makers program planning tool version 2 (DMPPT2) in 2016, to model the impact of circumcisions performed annually on the population prevalence of male circumcision (MC) in the subsequent years. Results of initial DMPPT2 modeling included implausible MC prevalence estimates, of up to 100%, for age bands whose sustained high uptake of VMMC pointed to unmet needs. Therefore, we conducted a cross-sectional survey among adolescents and men aged 10–29 years to determine the population level MC prevalence, guide target setting for achieving the goal of 80% MC prevalence and for validating DMPPT2 modelled estimates. METHODS: Beginning July to September 2019, a total of 3,569 adolescents and men aged 10–29 years from households in Siaya, Kisumu, Homa Bay and Migori Counties were interviewed and examined to establish the proportion already circumcised medically or non-medically. We measured agreement between self-reported and physically verified circumcision status and computed circumcision prevalence by age band and County. All statistical were test done at 5% level of significance. RESULTS: The observed MC prevalence for 15-29-year-old men was above 75% in all four counties; Homa Bay 75.6% (95% CI [69.0–81.2]), Kisumu 77.9% (95% CI [73.1–82.1]), Siaya 80.3% (95% CI [73.7–85.5]), and Migori 85.3% (95% CI [75.3–91.7]) but were 0.9–12.4% lower than DMPPT2-modelled estimates. For young adolescents 10–14 years, the observed prevalence ranged from 55.3% (95% CI [40.2–69.5]) in Migori to 74.9% (95% CI [68.8–80.2]) in Siaya and were 25.1–32.9% lower than DMMPT 2 estimates. Nearly all respondents (95.5%) consented to physical verification of their circumcision status with an agreement rate of 99.2% between self-reported and physically verified MC status (kappa agreement p-value<0.0001). CONCLUSION: This survey revealed overestimation of MC prevalence from DMPPT2-model compared to the observed population MC prevalence and provided new reference data for setting realistic program targets and re-calibrating inputs into DMPPT2. Periodic population-based MC prevalence surveys, especially for established programs, can help reconcile inconsistencies between VMMC program uptake data and modeled MC prevalence estimates which are based on the number of procedures reported in the program annually.
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spelling pubmed-82819992021-07-28 Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019 Odoyo-June, Elijah Davis, Stephanie Owuor, Nandi Laube, Catey Wambua, Jonesmus Musingila, Paul Young, Peter W. Aoko, Appolonia Agot, Kawango Joseph, Rachael Mwandi, Zebedee Ojiambo, Vincent Lucas, Todd Toledo, Carlos Wanyonyi, Ambrose PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Kenya started implementing voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) for HIV prevention in 2008 and adopted the use of decision makers program planning tool version 2 (DMPPT2) in 2016, to model the impact of circumcisions performed annually on the population prevalence of male circumcision (MC) in the subsequent years. Results of initial DMPPT2 modeling included implausible MC prevalence estimates, of up to 100%, for age bands whose sustained high uptake of VMMC pointed to unmet needs. Therefore, we conducted a cross-sectional survey among adolescents and men aged 10–29 years to determine the population level MC prevalence, guide target setting for achieving the goal of 80% MC prevalence and for validating DMPPT2 modelled estimates. METHODS: Beginning July to September 2019, a total of 3,569 adolescents and men aged 10–29 years from households in Siaya, Kisumu, Homa Bay and Migori Counties were interviewed and examined to establish the proportion already circumcised medically or non-medically. We measured agreement between self-reported and physically verified circumcision status and computed circumcision prevalence by age band and County. All statistical were test done at 5% level of significance. RESULTS: The observed MC prevalence for 15-29-year-old men was above 75% in all four counties; Homa Bay 75.6% (95% CI [69.0–81.2]), Kisumu 77.9% (95% CI [73.1–82.1]), Siaya 80.3% (95% CI [73.7–85.5]), and Migori 85.3% (95% CI [75.3–91.7]) but were 0.9–12.4% lower than DMPPT2-modelled estimates. For young adolescents 10–14 years, the observed prevalence ranged from 55.3% (95% CI [40.2–69.5]) in Migori to 74.9% (95% CI [68.8–80.2]) in Siaya and were 25.1–32.9% lower than DMMPT 2 estimates. Nearly all respondents (95.5%) consented to physical verification of their circumcision status with an agreement rate of 99.2% between self-reported and physically verified MC status (kappa agreement p-value<0.0001). CONCLUSION: This survey revealed overestimation of MC prevalence from DMPPT2-model compared to the observed population MC prevalence and provided new reference data for setting realistic program targets and re-calibrating inputs into DMPPT2. Periodic population-based MC prevalence surveys, especially for established programs, can help reconcile inconsistencies between VMMC program uptake data and modeled MC prevalence estimates which are based on the number of procedures reported in the program annually. Public Library of Science 2021-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8281999/ /pubmed/34264971 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254140 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
Odoyo-June, Elijah
Davis, Stephanie
Owuor, Nandi
Laube, Catey
Wambua, Jonesmus
Musingila, Paul
Young, Peter W.
Aoko, Appolonia
Agot, Kawango
Joseph, Rachael
Mwandi, Zebedee
Ojiambo, Vincent
Lucas, Todd
Toledo, Carlos
Wanyonyi, Ambrose
Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
title Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
title_full Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
title_fullStr Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
title_short Prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western Kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
title_sort prevalence of male circumcision in four culturally non-circumcising counties in western kenya after 10 years of program implementation from 2008 to 2019
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8281999/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34264971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254140
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