4.4 Article

Task-shifting alcohol interventions for HIV plus persons in Kenya: a cost-benefit analysis

Journal

BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2169-4

Keywords

Task-shifting; Alcohol; Cognitive-behavioral-therapy; CBT; HIV; AIDS; Cost-benefit-analysis; Kenya; Sub-Saharan Africa

Funding

  1. NIH/NIAAA [R21 AA016884, R01 AA020805]

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Background: Among HIV+ patients, alcohol use is a highly prevalent risk factor for both HIV transmission and poor adherence to HIV treatment. The large-scale implementation of effective interventions for treating alcohol problems remains a challenge in low-income countries with generalized HIV epidemics. It is essential to consider an intervention's cost-effectiveness in dollars-per-health-outcome, and the long-term economic impact-or return on investment in monetary terms. Methods: We conducted a cost-benefit analysis, measuring economic return on investment, of a task-shifted cognitivebehavioral therapy (CBT) intervention delivered by paraprofessionals to reduce alcohol use in a modeled cohort of 13,440 outpatients in Kenya. In our base-case, we estimated the costs and economic benefits from a societal perspective across a six-year time horizon, with a 3% annual discount rate. Costs included all costs associated with training and administering task-shifted CBT therapy. Benefits included the economic impact of lowered HIV incidence as well as the improvements in household and labor-force productivity. We conducted univariate and multivariate probabilistic sensitivity analyses to test the robustness of our results. Results: Under the base case, total costs for CBT rollout was $ 554,000, the value of benefits were $ 628,000, and the benefit-to-cost ratio was 1.13. Sensitivity analyses showed that under most assumptions, the benefit-to-cost ratio remained above unity indicating that the intervention was cost-saving (i. e., had positive return on investment). The duration of the treatment effect most effected the results in sensitivity analyses. Conclusions: CBT can be effectively and economically task-shifted to paraprofessionals in Kenya. The intervention can generate not only reductions in morbidity and mortality, but also economic savings for the health system in the medium and long term. The findings have implications for other countries with generalized HIV epidemics, high prevalence of alcohol consumption, and shortages of mental health professionals.

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