Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.

HIV/AIDS clinics in Uganda and other low-income countries face increasing numbers of patients and workforce shortages. We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing a Pharmacy-only Refill Program (PRP), a form of task-shifting, to the Standard of Care (SOC) at a large HIV/AIDS clinic in Ugand...

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Main Authors: Joseph B Babigumira, Barbara Castelnuovo, Andy Stergachis, Agnes Kiragga, Petra Shaefer, Mohammed Lamorde, Andrew Kambugu, Alice Muwanga, Louis P Garrison
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-03-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3065481?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-efb253693e254496a242888ec30cc6c72020-11-24T21:39:11ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-03-0163e1819310.1371/journal.pone.0018193Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.Joseph B BabigumiraBarbara CastelnuovoAndy StergachisAgnes KiraggaPetra ShaeferMohammed LamordeAndrew KambuguAlice MuwangaLouis P GarrisonHIV/AIDS clinics in Uganda and other low-income countries face increasing numbers of patients and workforce shortages. We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing a Pharmacy-only Refill Program (PRP), a form of task-shifting, to the Standard of Care (SOC) at a large HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda, the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI). The PRP was started to reduce workforce shortages and optimize patient care by substituting pharmacy visits for SOC involving monthly physician visits for accessing antiretroviral medicines.We used a retrospective cohort analysis to compare the effectiveness of the PRP compared to SOC. Effectiveness was defined as Favorable Immune Response (FIR), measured as having a CD4 lymphocyte count of over 500 cells/µl at follow-up. We used multivariate logistic regression to assess the difference in FIR between patients in the PRP and SOC. We incorporated estimates of effectiveness into an incremental cost-effectiveness analysis performed from a limited societal perspective. We estimated costs from previous studies at IDI and conducted univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. We identified 829 patients, 578 in the PRP and 251 in SOC. After 12.8 months (PRP) and 15.1 months (SOC) of follow-up, 18.9% of patients had a FIR, 18.6% in the PRP and 19.6% in SOC. There was a non-significant 9% decrease in the odds of having a FIR for PRP compared to SOC after adjusting for other variables (OR 0.93, 95% CI 0.55-1.58). The PRP was less costly than the SOC (US$ 520 vs. 655 annually, respectively). The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio comparing PRP to SOC was US$ 13,500 per FIR. PRP remained cost-effective at univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analysis.The PRP is more cost-effective than the standard of care. Similar task-shifting programs might help large HIV/AIDS clinics in Uganda and other low-income countries to cope with increasing numbers of patients seeking care.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3065481?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph B Babigumira
Barbara Castelnuovo
Andy Stergachis
Agnes Kiragga
Petra Shaefer
Mohammed Lamorde
Andrew Kambugu
Alice Muwanga
Louis P Garrison
spellingShingle Joseph B Babigumira
Barbara Castelnuovo
Andy Stergachis
Agnes Kiragga
Petra Shaefer
Mohammed Lamorde
Andrew Kambugu
Alice Muwanga
Louis P Garrison
Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Joseph B Babigumira
Barbara Castelnuovo
Andy Stergachis
Agnes Kiragga
Petra Shaefer
Mohammed Lamorde
Andrew Kambugu
Alice Muwanga
Louis P Garrison
author_sort Joseph B Babigumira
title Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.
title_short Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.
title_full Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.
title_fullStr Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.
title_full_unstemmed Cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda.
title_sort cost effectiveness of a pharmacy-only refill program in a large urban hiv/aids clinic in uganda.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-03-01
description HIV/AIDS clinics in Uganda and other low-income countries face increasing numbers of patients and workforce shortages. We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing a Pharmacy-only Refill Program (PRP), a form of task-shifting, to the Standard of Care (SOC) at a large HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda, the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI). The PRP was started to reduce workforce shortages and optimize patient care by substituting pharmacy visits for SOC involving monthly physician visits for accessing antiretroviral medicines.We used a retrospective cohort analysis to compare the effectiveness of the PRP compared to SOC. Effectiveness was defined as Favorable Immune Response (FIR), measured as having a CD4 lymphocyte count of over 500 cells/µl at follow-up. We used multivariate logistic regression to assess the difference in FIR between patients in the PRP and SOC. We incorporated estimates of effectiveness into an incremental cost-effectiveness analysis performed from a limited societal perspective. We estimated costs from previous studies at IDI and conducted univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. We identified 829 patients, 578 in the PRP and 251 in SOC. After 12.8 months (PRP) and 15.1 months (SOC) of follow-up, 18.9% of patients had a FIR, 18.6% in the PRP and 19.6% in SOC. There was a non-significant 9% decrease in the odds of having a FIR for PRP compared to SOC after adjusting for other variables (OR 0.93, 95% CI 0.55-1.58). The PRP was less costly than the SOC (US$ 520 vs. 655 annually, respectively). The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio comparing PRP to SOC was US$ 13,500 per FIR. PRP remained cost-effective at univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analysis.The PRP is more cost-effective than the standard of care. Similar task-shifting programs might help large HIV/AIDS clinics in Uganda and other low-income countries to cope with increasing numbers of patients seeking care.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3065481?pdf=render
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