Facility-based HIV self-testing strategies may substantially and cost-effectively increase the number of men and youth tested for HIV in Malawi: results from an individual-based mathematical model.
Author
Nichols, Brooke Ede Nooy, Alexandra
Benade, Mariet
Balakasi, Kelvin
Mphande, Misheck
Rao, Gabriella
Claassen, Cassidy W
Khan, Shaukat
Stillson, Christian
Russell, Colin A
Doi, Naoko
Dovel, Kathryn
Date
2022-10-25Journal
Journal of the International AIDS SocietyType
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
INTRODUCTION: Malawi is rapidly closing the gap in achieving the UNAIDS 95-95-95 targets, with 90% of people living with HIV in Malawi aware of their status. As we approach epidemic control, interventions to improve coverage will become more costly. There is, therefore, an urgent need to identify innovative and low-cost strategies to maintain and increase testing coverage without diverting resources from other HIV services. The objective of this study is to model different combinations of facility-based HIV testing modalities and determine the most cost-effective strategy to increase the proportion of men and youth testing for HIV. METHODS: A data-driven individual-based model was parameterized with data from a community-representative survey (socio-demographic, health service utilization and HIV testing history) of men and youth in Malawi (data collected August 2019). In total, 79 different strategies for the implementation of HIV self-testing (HIVST) and provider-initiated-testing-and-counselling at the outpatient department (OPD) were evaluated. Outcomes included percent of men/youth tested for HIV in a 12-month period, cost-effectiveness and human resource requirements. The testing yield was assumed to be constant across the scenarios. RESULTS: Facility-based HIVST offered year-round resulted in the greatest increase in the proportion of men and youth tested in the OPD (from 45% to 72%-83%), was considered cost-saving for HIVST kit priced at $1.00, and generally reduced required personnel as compared to the status quo. At higher HIVST kit prices, and more relaxed eligibility criteria, all scenarios that considered year-round HIVST in the OPD remained on the cost-effectiveness frontier. CONCLUSIONS: Facility-based HIVST is a cost-effective strategy to increase the proportion of men/youth tested for HIV in Malawi and decreases the human resource requirements for HIV testing in the OPD-providing additional healthcare worker time for other priority healthcare activities.Rights/Terms
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the International AIDS Society.Keyword
HIV self-testingcost-effectiveness analysis
healthcare facilities
mathematical modelling
priority populations
sub-Saharan Africa
Identifier to cite or link to this item
http://hdl.handle.net/10713/20028ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1002/jia2.26020