학술논문

Unit costs of needle and syringe program provision: a global systematic review and cost extrapolation
Document Type
article
Source
AIDS. 37(15)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Behavioral and Social Science
Liver Disease
Digestive Diseases
Hepatitis - C
Emerging Infectious Diseases
HIV/AIDS
Prevention
Substance Misuse
Hepatitis
Infectious Diseases
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Substance Abuse
Intravenous
Needle-Exchange Programs
HIV Infections
Hepatitis C
Hepacivirus
costs
global cost extrapolation
harm reduction
needle and syringe programs
people who inject drugs
syringe exchange program
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Virology
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundNeedle and syringe programs (NSPs) are effective at preventing HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) among people who inject drugs (PWID), yet global coverage is low, partly because governments lack data on the cost and cost-effectiveness of NSP in their countries to plan and fund their responses. We conducted a global systematic review of unit costs of NSP provision to inform estimation of cost drivers and extrapolated costs to other countries.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review to extract data on the cost per syringe distributed and its cost drivers. We estimated the impact of country-level and program-level variables on the cost per syringe distributed using linear mixed-effects models. These models were used to predict unit costs of NSP provision, with the best performing model used to extrapolate the cost per syringe distributed for 137 countries. The total cost for a comprehensive NSP (200 syringes per PWID/year) was also estimated for 68 countries with PWID population size estimates.ResultsWe identified 55 estimates of the unit cost per syringe distributed from 14 countries. Unit costs were extrapolated for 137 countries, ranging from $0.08 to $20.77 (2020 USD) per syringe distributed. The total estimated spend for a high-coverage, comprehensive NSP across 68 countries with PWID size estimates is $5 035 902 000 for 10 887 500 PWID, 2.1-times higher than current spend.ConclusionOur review identified cost estimates from high-income, upper-middle-income, and lower-middle-income countries. Regression models may be useful for estimating NSP costs in countries without data to inform HIV/HCV prevention programming and policy.