Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College London, London, UK.
AIDS. 2019 Jun 1;33(7):1241-1246. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000002158.
To investigate how 'real-world' constraints on the allocative and technical efficiency of HIV prevention programmes affect resource allocation and the number of infections averted.
Epidemiological modelling and economic analyses in Benin, South Africa and Tanzania.
We simulated different HIV prevention programmes, and first determined the most efficient allocation of resources, in which the HIV prevention budget is shared among specific interventions, risk-groups and provinces to maximize the number of infections averted. We then identified the efficient allocation of resources and achievable impact given the following constraints to allocative efficiency: earmarking [provinces with budgets fund pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for low-risk women first], meeting targets [provinces with budgets fund universal test-and-treat (UTT) first] and minimizing changes in the geographical distribution of funds. We modelled technical inefficiencies as a reduction in the coverage of PrEP or UTT, which were factored into the resource allocation process or took effect following the allocation. Each scenario was investigated over a range of budgets, such that the impact reaches its maximum.
The 'earmarking', 'meeting targets' and 'minimizing change' constraints reduce the potential impact of HIV prevention programmes, but at the higher budgets these constraints have little to no effect (approximately 35 billion US$ in Tanzania). Over-estimating technical efficiency can result in a loss of impact compared to what would be possible if technical efficiencies were known accurately.
Failing to account for constraints on allocative and technical efficiency can result in the overestimation of the health gains possible, and for technical inefficiencies the allocation of an inefficient strategy.
研究艾滋病毒预防规划在分配和技术效率方面的“实际”限制如何影响资源分配和避免感染的人数。
在贝宁、南非和坦桑尼亚进行的流行病学建模和经济分析。
我们模拟了不同的艾滋病毒预防方案,首先确定了资源的最有效分配,即在艾滋病毒预防预算中,在特定干预措施、风险群体和省份之间分配资源,以最大限度地避免感染人数。然后,我们确定了在以下分配效率限制下资源的有效分配和可实现的影响:指定[预算用于为低风险妇女提供暴露前预防(PrEP)的省份优先]、实现目标[预算用于普遍检测和治疗(UTT)的省份优先]和尽量减少资金地理分布的变化。我们将技术效率低下建模为 PrEP 或 UTT 的覆盖率降低,这些因素被纳入资源分配过程或在分配后生效。针对不同的预算范围,对每个方案进行了调查,以实现最大的影响。
“指定”、“实现目标”和“最小化变化”等限制会降低艾滋病毒预防规划的潜在影响,但在较高的预算下,这些限制几乎没有影响(坦桑尼亚约 350 亿美元)。高估技术效率可能会导致与准确了解技术效率时相比,影响损失。
不考虑分配和技术效率的限制可能会导致对可能获得的健康收益的高估,并且对于技术效率低下,可能会分配出低效的策略。