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The costs of HIV prevention for different target populations in Mumbai, Thane and Banglalore

Authors :
Sudha Chandrashekar
Michel Alary
Peter Vickerman
Govindraj Shetty
Bhaskar Reddy
Anna Vassall
Source :
BMC Public Health, BMC Public Health, Vol 11, Iss Suppl 6, p S7 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Background Avahan, the India AIDS Initiative, delivers HIV prevention services to high-risk populations at scale. Although the broad costs of such HIV interventions are known, to-date there has been little data available on the comparative costs of reaching different target groups, including female sex workers (FSWs), replace with ‘high risk men who have sex with men (HR-MSM) and trans-genders. Methods Costs are estimated for the first three years of Avahan scale up differentiated by typology of female sex workers (brothel, street, home, lodge based, bar based), HR-MSM and transgenders in urban districts in India: Mumbai and Thane in Maharashtra and Bangalore in Karnataka. Financial and economic costs were collected prospectively from a provider perspective. Outputs were measured using data collected by the Avahan programme. Costs are presented in US$2008. Results Costs were found to vary substantially by target group. Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) working with transgender populations had a higher mean cost (US $116) per person reached compared to those dealing primarily with FSWs (US $75-96) and MSWs (US $90) by the end of year three of the programme in Mumbai. The mean cost of delivering the intervention to HR-MSMs (US $42) was higher than delivering it to FSWs (US $37) in Bangalore. The package of services delivered to each target group was similar, and our results suggest that cost variation is related to the target population size, the intensity of the programme (in terms of number of contacts made per year) and a number of specific issues related to each target group. Conclusions Based on our data policy makers and program managers need to consider the ease of accessing high risk population when planning and budgeting for HIV prevention services for these populations and avoid funding programmes on the basis of target population size alone.

Details

ISSN :
14712458
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Public Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....40e96a047fb5e166666c8bf944827eda
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-11-s6-s7