Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.

BACKGROUND:In 2010, the South African Government initiated a voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) program as a part of the country's HIV prevention strategy based on compelling evidence that VMMC reduces men's risk of becoming HIV infected by approximately 60%. A previous VMMC costin...

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Main Authors: Michel Tchuenche, Emmanuel Njeuhmeli, Carl Schütte, Lahla Ngubeni, Isaac Choge, Enilda Martin, Dayanund Loykissoonlal, Valerian Kiggundu, Aisha Yansaneh, Steven Forsythe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208698
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spelling doaj-aacaf6fef29d4a21a4ce547a7d5ba9c42021-03-03T21:02:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020869810.1371/journal.pone.0208698Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.Michel TchuencheMichel TchuencheEmmanuel NjeuhmeliCarl SchütteLahla NgubeniIsaac ChogeEnilda MartinDayanund LoykissoonlalValerian KiggunduAisha YansanehSteven ForsytheBACKGROUND:In 2010, the South African Government initiated a voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) program as a part of the country's HIV prevention strategy based on compelling evidence that VMMC reduces men's risk of becoming HIV infected by approximately 60%. A previous VMMC costing study at Government and PEPFAR-supported facilities noted that the lack of sufficient data from the private sector represented a gap in knowledge concerning the overall cost of scaling up VMMC services. This study, conducted in mid-2016, focused on surgical circumcision and aims to address this limitation. METHODS:VMMC service delivery cost data were collected at 13 private facilities in three provinces in South Africa: Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, and Mpumalanga. Unit costs were calculated using a bottom-up approach by cost components, and then disaggregated by facility type and urbanization level. VMMC demand creation, and higher-level management and program support costs were not collected. The unit cost of VMMC service delivery at private facilities in South Africa was calculated as a weighted average of the unit costs at the 13 facilities. KEY FINDINGS:At the average annual exchange rate of R10.83 = $1, the unit cost including training and cost of continuous quality improvement (CQI) to provide VMMC at private facilities was $137. The largest cost components were consumables (40%) and direct labor (35%). Eleven out of the 13 surveyed private sector facilities were fixed sites (with a unit cost of $142), while one was a fixed site with outreach services (with a unit cost of $156), and the last one provided services at a combination of fixed, outreach and mobile sites (with a unit cost per circumcision performed of $123). The unit cost was not substantially different based on the level of urbanization: $141, $129, and $143 at urban, peri-urban, and rural facilities, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:The private sector VMMC unit cost ($137) did not differ substantially from that at government and PEPFAR-supported facilities ($132 based on results from a similar study conducted in 2014 in South Africa at 33 sites across eight of the countries nine provinces). The two largest cost drivers, consumables and direct labor, were comparable across the two studies (75% in private facilities and 67% in public/PEPFAR-supported facilities). Results from this study provide VMMC unit cost data that had been missing and makes an important contribution to a better understanding of the costs of VMMC service delivery, enabling VMMC programs to make informed decisions regarding funding levels and scale-up strategies for VMMC in South Africa.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208698
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel Tchuenche
Michel Tchuenche
Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
Carl Schütte
Lahla Ngubeni
Isaac Choge
Enilda Martin
Dayanund Loykissoonlal
Valerian Kiggundu
Aisha Yansaneh
Steven Forsythe
spellingShingle Michel Tchuenche
Michel Tchuenche
Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
Carl Schütte
Lahla Ngubeni
Isaac Choge
Enilda Martin
Dayanund Loykissoonlal
Valerian Kiggundu
Aisha Yansaneh
Steven Forsythe
Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michel Tchuenche
Michel Tchuenche
Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
Carl Schütte
Lahla Ngubeni
Isaac Choge
Enilda Martin
Dayanund Loykissoonlal
Valerian Kiggundu
Aisha Yansaneh
Steven Forsythe
author_sort Michel Tchuenche
title Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
title_short Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
title_full Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
title_fullStr Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
title_full_unstemmed Voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in South Africa: The economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
title_sort voluntary medical male circumcision service delivery in south africa: the economic costs and potential opportunity for private sector involvement.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description BACKGROUND:In 2010, the South African Government initiated a voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) program as a part of the country's HIV prevention strategy based on compelling evidence that VMMC reduces men's risk of becoming HIV infected by approximately 60%. A previous VMMC costing study at Government and PEPFAR-supported facilities noted that the lack of sufficient data from the private sector represented a gap in knowledge concerning the overall cost of scaling up VMMC services. This study, conducted in mid-2016, focused on surgical circumcision and aims to address this limitation. METHODS:VMMC service delivery cost data were collected at 13 private facilities in three provinces in South Africa: Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, and Mpumalanga. Unit costs were calculated using a bottom-up approach by cost components, and then disaggregated by facility type and urbanization level. VMMC demand creation, and higher-level management and program support costs were not collected. The unit cost of VMMC service delivery at private facilities in South Africa was calculated as a weighted average of the unit costs at the 13 facilities. KEY FINDINGS:At the average annual exchange rate of R10.83 = $1, the unit cost including training and cost of continuous quality improvement (CQI) to provide VMMC at private facilities was $137. The largest cost components were consumables (40%) and direct labor (35%). Eleven out of the 13 surveyed private sector facilities were fixed sites (with a unit cost of $142), while one was a fixed site with outreach services (with a unit cost of $156), and the last one provided services at a combination of fixed, outreach and mobile sites (with a unit cost per circumcision performed of $123). The unit cost was not substantially different based on the level of urbanization: $141, $129, and $143 at urban, peri-urban, and rural facilities, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:The private sector VMMC unit cost ($137) did not differ substantially from that at government and PEPFAR-supported facilities ($132 based on results from a similar study conducted in 2014 in South Africa at 33 sites across eight of the countries nine provinces). The two largest cost drivers, consumables and direct labor, were comparable across the two studies (75% in private facilities and 67% in public/PEPFAR-supported facilities). Results from this study provide VMMC unit cost data that had been missing and makes an important contribution to a better understanding of the costs of VMMC service delivery, enabling VMMC programs to make informed decisions regarding funding levels and scale-up strategies for VMMC in South Africa.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208698
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