Cost and outcomes of routine HIV care and treatment: public and private service delivery models covering low-income earners in South Africa

Author:

Long L. C.,Girdwood S.,Govender K.,Meyer-Rath G.,Miot J.

Abstract

Abstract Background While South Africa’s national HIV program is the largest in the world, it has yet to reach the UNAIDS 95–95-95 targets. To reach these targets, the expansion of the HIV treatment program may be accelerated through the use private sector delivery models. This study identified three innovative non-governmental primary health care models (private sector) providing HIV treatment, as well as two government primary health clinics (public sector) that served similar populations. We estimated the resources used, and costs and outcomes of HIV treatment across these models to provide inputs to inform decisions around how these services might best be provided through National Health Insurance (NHI). Methods A review of potential private sector models for HIV treatment in a primary health care setting was conducted. Models actively offering HIV treatment (i.e. in 2019) were considered for inclusion in the evaluation, subject to data availability and location. These models were augmented by government primary health clinics offering HIV services in similar locations. We conducted a cost-outcomes analysis by collecting patient-level resource usage and treatment outcomes through retrospective medical record reviews and a bottom-up micro-costing from the provider perspective (public or private payer). Patient outcomes were based on whether the patient was still in care at the end of the follow up period and viral load (VL) status, to create the following outcome categories: in care and responding (VL suppressed), in care and not responding (VL unsuppressed), in care (VL unknown) and not in care (LTFU or deceased). Data collection was conducted in 2019 and reflects services provided during the 4 years prior to that (2016–2019). Results Three hundred seventy-six patients were included across the five HIV treatment models. Across the three private sector models there were differences in the costs and outcomes of HIV treatment delivery, two of the models had results similar to the public sector primary health clinics. The nurse-led model appears to have a cost-outcome profile distinct from the others. Conclusion The results show that across the private sector models studied the costs and outcomes of HIV treatment delivery vary, yet there were models that provided costs and outcomes similar to those found with public sector delivery. Offering HIV treatment under NHI through private delivery models could therefore be an option to increase access beyond the current public sector capacity.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy

Reference22 articles.

1. UNAIDS, Fast-track. Ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030. Geneva, Switzerland: UNAIDS; 2014.

2. UNAIDS, UNAIDS Data 2021. 2021, UNAIDS.

3. Guthrie T, et al. Consolidated spending on HIV and TB in South Africa (2014/15–2016/17), in Finance & Governance Project, results for development institute. Pretoria: National Department of Health; 2018.

4. PEPFAR: U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, South Africa PEPFAR Country Operational Plan (COP) 2020: Strategic Direction Summary. p. 2020.

5. Council for Medical Schemes, Council for Medical Schemes Annual Report 2019/2020. 2020.

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