Chesson Harrell W, Williams Austin M, Ansari Bahareh, Islam Md Hafizul, Johnson Britney L, Collins Dayne, Gift Thomas L, Martin Erika G
From the Division of STD Prevention, National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
Queen's Business School, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, United Kingdom.
Sex Transm Dis. 2025 Aug 1;52(8):443-449. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000002147. Epub 2025 Mar 3.
This article describes an updated spreadsheet tool that sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention programs in the United States can use to estimate the health and economic benefits of their STI and HIV prevention activities.
The development of the updated tool, Sexually Transmitted Infection Costs (STIC) Figure 2.0, involved 2 main components. First, we revised the tool to be more useful and user-friendly based on feedback from focus groups and usability testing. Second, we updated the mathematical model behind the calculations by (1) revising the model to reflect current STI and HIV prevention activities in the United States, (2) updating the epidemiological and economic parameters in the model using the best available evidence, and (3) including ranges (not just point estimates) in the model output. To demonstrate the use of STIC Figure 2.0, we applied it to estimate the impact of a hypothetical prevention program, consistent with that of a health department or large STI clinic in a metropolitan area.
STIC Figure 2.0 incorporated new features, including an interactive user interface to explore findings and create customized charts for use in reports and presentations. The hypothetical example we analyzed illustrated how providing STI treatment to 2680 people and HIV prevention services to 325 people could avert 1253 adverse outcomes and save more than $2 million in medical costs and productivity costs.
Although subject to important limitations, STIC Figure 2.0 allows state and local programs, including STI clinics, to calculate evidence-based estimates of the impact of their program activities.
本文介绍了一种更新的电子表格工具,美国的性传播感染(STI)预防项目可利用该工具来估算其STI和HIV预防活动的健康和经济效益。
更新后的工具“性传播感染成本(STIC)图2.0”的开发涉及两个主要部分。首先,我们根据焦点小组的反馈和可用性测试,对该工具进行了修订,使其更有用且用户友好。其次,我们通过以下方式更新了计算背后的数学模型:(1)修订模型以反映美国当前的STI和HIV预防活动;(2)使用现有最佳证据更新模型中的流行病学和经济参数;(3)在模型输出中纳入范围(而非仅点估计)。为展示STIC图2.0的使用方法,我们将其应用于估算一个假设的预防项目的影响,该项目与大城市地区的卫生部门或大型STI诊所的项目一致。
STIC图2.0纳入了新功能,包括一个交互式用户界面,用于探索结果并创建定制图表,以便在报告和演示中使用。我们分析的假设示例说明了为2680人提供STI治疗和为325人提供HIV预防服务如何能够避免1253个不良后果,并节省超过200万美元的医疗成本和生产力成本。
尽管存在重要局限性,但STIC图2.0允许包括STI诊所在内的州和地方项目计算其项目活动影响的循证估计值。