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Applying the WHO MOVE Guidance for Male Medical Circumcision – Cost of Facility-based Provision in a Test Case for South Africa. SHIPP. Sexual HIV Prevention Programme. Health Policy Initiative TO2. Partners . Acknowledgments.
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Applying the WHO MOVE Guidance for Male Medical Circumcision – Cost of Facility-based Provision in a Test Case for South Africa SHIPP Sexual HIV Prevention Programme Health Policy Initiative TO2 Partners
Acknowledgments • Data for this analysis came from a variety of sources and represents the work of many individuals. • Some data from prior HPI TO1 MMC costing in South Africa • Ozayr Mohamed, Steven Forsythe • Bophelo Pele Project, Orange Farm, Gauteng • CHAPS
Background (1): VMMC in South Africa • Government & partners committed to scale-up of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC). • Traditional MC occurs for certain groups • But initiation may or may not involve complete circumcision* • Unmet need for voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) • Additional 4.33 mn. MMCs in 2011-15 (~80% coverage) • PEPFAR reported VMMC in 2010: 131,117 • NDOH target for 2011-12: 500,000 VMMCs • Allocation: R160 million (about US$20 million) • How to achieve the scale-up? * Data from Bophelo Pele, Orange Farm
Background (2): Origin of this work • March 2011: NDOH was considering various scale-up plans: • Mobile clinics and/or transitory “park homes” • Scale-up of VMMC provision via existing public health facilities: clinics, CHCs, district hospitals; and using MOVE • Mixed models • NDOH request to HPI TO2: look again at unit costs with a model of their choosing, apply scenarios • This should focus on the unit cost of 2: fixed facilities • Build on previous unit cost work by HPI at 20 South African facilities in 2010
Costs recently used in a 13 country study Njeuhmeli et al. PLOS 2011 Direct costs: $69.71 Indirect costs: $10.42 $80.13 (+/- 20%: $64.1-$96.16) Source: Zimbabwe 2010 data (plus Swaziland)
Costs from HPI work in 2010 in South Africa Mohamed et al. 2010 • 20 sites visited and retrospective data collected (2008-09) • Costing using an ingredients-based approach • Cost of provision “as-is” • Cost of provision using the MOVE model • For B. “MOVE” unit costs: • Costs with disposable MC consumables kits; • task sharing; 1 doctor + 1 surgical nurse + 4 nursing assistants • variation in costs as cost of disposable MC kits is varied • Included indirect costs: avg. in public facilities = 24% of total
South Africa facility-based costing, 2010 Mohamed et al. (HPI 2010) – unit cost without complications “As-is” costs
South Africa facility-based costing, 2010 Mohamed et al. (HPI 2010) – unit cost without complications MOVE-based costs
Proposed test case of scale-up plan • Prepare facilities to apply MOVE • Facilities will procure MMC commodities and equipment • Procurement will be from each facility’s existing suppliers • These costs will be funded though CCMT Conditional Grants to provinces
Preparing the analysis -1 NDOH guidance for the costing exercise: • Surgical technique: forceps-guided MMC (FGMC) • Use disposable standard consumables kit for FGMC, with reusable instruments. Add infection prevention, waste management, and emergency commodities. • Apply WHO MOVE staffing model with task sharing • Apply current SA commodity and equipment prices, as known • Focus on direct costs to be covered by additional funds
Preparing the analysis -2 Not yet known/estimated at this stage: • Actual mix of facilities that will provide MMC from clinic, CHC, DH • Facility readiness for MMC: basic commodity availability, equipment, infrastructure, staff complement, staff training • Magnitude of demand for MMC at public health facilities • Demand creation and IEC in catchment areas of facilities • Possible changes to prices, esp. if pooled procurement • Other constraints on scale-up
What was costed – 1 (MOVE elements) Not costed: HTC (only pre-procedure MMC counseling)
What was costed - 2 No indirect costs Key points: • Salary data same as 2010 study • Follow-up visits at +2, +7 days • 1 week MMC training for staff (except clerks); differing costs • Haemostasis by diathermy • Autoclave (differing volume) for sterilization of reusable instruments • Emergency (haemorrhage or sepsis) cases are 2%
Analysis setup - 1 Two possible site layouts and staffing models, based on MOVE:
MOVE –based 8-bays site design Source: WHO MOVE 2010
Analysis setup - rationale Primary cause for using two types of sites: Demand • without demand creation, volume likely low <20 MMCs per day/team • 4-bay designs suitable when demand >30 MMCs per day per team • Pre-procuring commodities and staffing up at the 8-bays design without demand creation may lead to cost inefficiencies • Designs started as 4-bay sites can be expanded with additional site preparation when demand creation picks up • Many facilities already require renovations to accommodate even a 4-bay design* * Site assessment essential – SA mapping ongoing
Sources for cost data • Bophelo Pele Male Circumcision Project, Orange Farm, Gauteng implemented by CHAPS – March 2011 • Cost data collection for MMC by HPI project in early 2010 • Cost enquiries for autoclaves and diathermy machines – March 2011 • Other inputs from key contacts – March 2011 • Rand/$ = 6.88 • Kit 1 price = R103 ($15 ) per MMC Consumable pack
Unit direct costs per client: 4-bay site design At 15 clients per day per site Unit direct costs, 4-bay design Standard client (no complications) Rand 248 / $36.1 With complications(2% or less): Rand 2,030.6 / $306.6
Unit direct costs per client: 8-bay site design At 30 clients per day per site Unit direct costs, 8-bay site Standard client (no complications) Rand 316.4 / $46 With complications (2% or less: Rand 2,109.4 / $306.6
Also calculated • Monthly and first year direct cost per SA province • Latter is inclusive of total site preparation costs • Estimate of numbers of full-time equivalent staff needed to staff sites Above calculations at province level based on: • Number of facilities to initiate the service • Proportion of 4-bay and 8-bay sites • Proportion of facilities needing VMMC site preparation
For further consideration • Demand creation should be costed (estimates available) • Task-shifting could reduce personnel costs, especially in the 8-bay design • Requires policy change and extra up-front training costs for surgical nurses • Weekend clinic? Labor cost calculation assumed that facilities are open for 22 days/month only; 48 weeks/year • Keeping facilities open on Saturday to catch working men, but might require paying some staff overtime
THANK YOU Acknowledgements Eurica Palmer, Farley Cleghorn, Zuzelle Pretorius (HPI TO2, Futures Group)Shaidah Asmall – NDOH, former HPI TO2 Dr N Dlamini – NDOHDr Loy - NDOH
Purpose of this analysis • Provide a cost range for financial planning at NDOH • Provide a flexible costing tool for NDOH use in budgeting Facility based Medical Male Circumcision Costing tool (FMMCC,v.1) • Provide a consistent procurement list and staffing model for province and facility-level planning • Provide a unit cost for benchmarking against other MMC rollouts across Africa, and southern Africa in particular Specifically, the costing tool will: • Guide NDOH on cost implications for MMC • incorporate the effect of price changes – e.g., due to pooled procurement and other factors on national and province-level costs
WHO MOVE Guidance – Part B (Kits and Modules) There are three variations in the kits, given the surgical method: Both Kit 1 and 2 require an autoclave
WHO MOVE Guidance – Part A • WHO Model for Optimizing Volume and Efficiency for MC (2010) • Three recommended surgical MC methods (procedure time): • Forceps-guided (19 minutes 20 seconds) • Dorsal slit (21 minutes 45 seconds) • Sleeve resection (27 minutes) • Recommended use of the following techniques/concepts: • Hemostasis by diathermy machine • Task Sharing and/or Task Shifting • Bundling of surgical items; use pre-assembled surgical kits • Theater layout for fast patient turnover • Client scheduling (appointments) • Staff ratios • 1 physician/surgeon per 4 clients (1 surgeon per 4 surgical bays*) • 4 preparation/surgical assistants (e.g., nurse assistants) per surgeon • 1 anesthesia/suture provider (e.g., surgical nurse) per surgeon • 1-2 counselors per team + 1 site manager (if high volume site)