Integrated Delivery, Global Development Program, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, Washington, United States of America; Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, United States of America.
Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, Washington (DC), United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2014 May 6;11(5):e1001641. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001641. eCollection 2014 May.
Voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) is capable of reducing the risk of sexual transmission of HIV from females to males by approximately 60%. In 2007, the WHO and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) recommended making VMMC part of a comprehensive HIV prevention package in countries with a generalized HIV epidemic and low rates of male circumcision. Modeling studies undertaken in 2009-2011 estimated that circumcising 80% of adult males in 14 priority countries in Eastern and Southern Africa within five years, and sustaining coverage levels thereafter, could avert 3.4 million HIV infections within 15 years and save US$16.5 billion in treatment costs. In response, WHO/UNAIDS launched the Joint Strategic Action Framework for accelerating the scale-up of VMMC for HIV prevention in Southern and Eastern Africa, calling for 80% coverage of adult male circumcision by 2016. While VMMC programs have grown dramatically since inception, they appear unlikely to reach this goal. This review provides an overview of findings from the PLOS Collection "Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision for HIV Prevention: Improving Quality, Efficiency, Cost Effectiveness, and Demand for Services during an Accelerated Scale-up." The use of devices for VMMC is also explored. We propose emphasizing management solutions to help VMMC programs in the priority countries achieve the desired impact of averting the greatest possible number of HIV infections. Our recommendations include advocating for prioritization and funding of VMMC, increasing strategic targeting to achieve the goal of reducing HIV incidence, focusing on programmatic efficiency, exploring the role of new technologies, rethinking demand creation, strengthening data use for decision-making, improving governments' program management capacity, strategizing for sustainability, and maintaining a flexible scale-up strategy informed by a strong monitoring, learning, and evaluation platform.
自愿男性包皮环切术(VMMC)能够将女性向男性传播 HIV 的风险降低约 60%。2007 年,世界卫生组织(WHO)和联合国艾滋病规划署(UNAIDS)建议在 HIV 广泛流行且男性包皮环切率较低的国家,将 VMMC 纳入综合性 HIV 预防一揽子计划。2009-2011 年开展的建模研究估计,在五年内对东部和南部非洲 14 个重点国家 80%的成年男性进行包皮环切,并在此后维持覆盖水平,可在 15 年内避免 340 万例 HIV 感染,并节省 165 亿美元的治疗费用。为此,世界卫生组织/艾滋病规划署发起了《加速在南部和东部非洲扩大 VMMC 以预防 HIV 的联合战略行动计划》,呼吁到 2016 年实现 80%的成年男性接受包皮环切。自启动以来,VMMC 项目发展迅速,但似乎不太可能实现这一目标。本综述概述了《PLOS 文集“自愿男性包皮环切术预防 HIV:在加速扩大规模期间提高服务质量、效率、成本效益和需求”》中各项研究的结果。还探讨了 VMMC 中使用器械的问题。我们建议强调管理解决方案,以帮助重点国家的 VMMC 项目实现避免尽可能多的 HIV 感染的预期效果。我们的建议包括倡导 VMMC 的优先排序和资金投入,增加战略定位以实现降低 HIV 发病率的目标,注重方案效率,探索新技术的作用,重新思考需求创造,加强数据在决策中的应用,提高政府的项目管理能力,制定可持续发展战略,以及根据强大的监测、学习和评估平台保持灵活的扩大规模策略。
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