1 / 12

Cost-effectiveness of harm r eduction

Cost-effectiveness of harm r eduction. David P Wilson. Why worry?. UNAIDS, 2012. What HR interventions work?. Three proven priority interventions NSP OST ART

jabari
Download Presentation

Cost-effectiveness of harm r eduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cost-effectiveness of harm reduction David P Wilson

  2. Why worry? UNAIDS, 2012

  3. What HR interventions work? • Three proven priority interventions • NSP • OST • ART • 9-component comprehensive package, endorsed by WHO, UNODC and UNAIDS - Three priority interventions plus HCT, condoms, IEC, STI, HCV and TB prevention/treatment

  4. What we know about NSPs • Review of evidence from 42 studies (Gibson et al, 2001) • 28 showed a favorable outcome • 2 showed an unfavorable outcome • Others showed no clear results or mixed findings • Ecological studies: 81 cities (Hurley et al, 1997)

  5. What we know about NSPs • Led to incidence declines • E.g. New York City: 4% to 1% • Many places without NSPs have had large increases • E.g. Sargodha, Bangkok, Manipur, Cebu • Reasons are obvious • Behavior in British Columbia exemplifies (Vancouver, Victoria)

  6. What are the cost ranges?NSPs • Average cost of NSP provision $23–71 /year 1 • NSP cost varies by region and delivery system 2 1 UNAIDS 2007 resource estimations; Schwartlaender et al 2011. 2 UNSW estimates, based on 10 studies identified in the 6 regions

  7. Cost-effectiveness of NSPs • Systematic review (Jones 2006) • 13 economic studies [most in North America]: all concluded that NSPs were cost-effective or cost-saving compared to lifetime cost of HIV • Net financial benefits of NSPs in all regions; both high- and low- income settings • E.g. China (Ni et al 2012) • USA (Hrishikesh et al 2008) • Bangladesh (Guinness et al 2008) • Australia (Kwon et al 2012)

  8. What we know about OST • All randomized controlled trials of OST have produced positive results (Mattick et al, 2003) • OST reduces injecting activity (Cochrane Syst. Review; Gowing, 2008; Mattick, 2009) • Meta-analysis (North America, Europe & Asia) • 54% reduction in HIV acquisition

  9. What we know about OST and the importance of combining the priority HR interventions to achieve impact Empirical evidence: NSP + OST at scale: Amsterdam cohort study - 57% HIV incidence reduction, 64% HCV incidence reduction (incidence reductions low if service uptake partial). Similar findings in Central Asia. Source: Van Den Berg et al, 2008

  10. What are the cost ranges?OST 2 1 UNAIDS 2007 resource estimations; Schwartlaender et al 2011. 2 UNSW estimates, based on 10 studies identified in the 6 regions • Average OST cost : Methadone 80 mg: $363 - 1,057 / year; Buprenorphine, low dose: $1,236 – 3,167 /year1 • OST consistently far costlier than NSP

  11. Priority HR intervention packages are cost-effective and cost-saving • Estimated cost-effectiveness ratios for priority intervention package favorable in all regions • costs per HIV infection averted: $100 to $1,000 • In all regions with data on return on investment, harm reduction packages are cost-saving • Total future ROI $1.1 – 8.0 (3% discounting)

  12. Conclusions • Globally, harm reduction interventions are good value for money, improving health outcomes for PWID. • ~US$100 to $1,000 per HIV infection averted • NSPs: Moderate-to-strong effectiveness and cost-effectiveness or even cost saving! • OST: Strong evidence for effectiveness. • Questionable cost-effectiveness when considering just HIV or HCV alone; moderate cost-effectiveness when drug-related issues included • OST + NSP: Strong cost-effectiveness • ART: Cost-effective for survival, weak evidence for prevention, PrEP not cost-effective

More Related