The cost of HIV services at health facilities in Cambodia.

PLoS One

International Development Division, Abt Associates, Inc., Bethesda, Maryland, United States.

Published: January 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Donor funding for HIV/AIDS services in Cambodia is declining, necessitating the mobilization of domestic resources to sustain and expand these services while understanding associated costs.
  • The study investigated the costs of HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy (ART) in selected high-burden provinces, revealing an average cost of $8.92 per visit for testing at health centers and $250 per patient per year for first-line ART.
  • Results indicated that staffing levels significantly impact costs, with over 50% of ART costs funded by donors; the findings can assist in establishing reimbursement rates as Cambodia increases social health insurance coverage.

Article Abstract

Background: Donor funding for HIV/AIDS services is declining in Cambodia, and domestic resources need to be mobilized to sustain and expand these services. However, the cost of delivering HIV/AIDS services is not well studied in Cambodia. This study aims to assess the costs of delivering HIV/AIDS services, identify the major components of costs, and sources of funding.

Methods: Four of the six highest HIV burden provinces were selected at random for this study. Within each province, four health centers and two hospitals were selected for detailed data collection. A mix of top-down and bottom-up methods were used to assess the costs for HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy (ART) from the provider perspective. We assessed the differences in the quantity and prices of inputs between health facilities of the same type to identify cost-drivers.

Results: The average cost per visit for HIV testing was $8.92 at health centers and $14.03 at referral hospitals. Differences in the number of visits per staff were the primary determinant of differences in the cost per visit. First-line ART costed about $250 per patient per year, and the number of patients per staff was an important cost driver. Second-line ART costed from $500 to $716 per patient per year, on average, across the types of facilities, with the quantity and mix of second-line antiretroviral drugs being an important cost driver. Inpatient care at referral and provincial hospitals in total represented less than 2 percent of costs of outpatient ART.

Discussion: Costs are similar to neighboring countries, but over 50% of the costs of ART are financed by donors. Cambodia now is scaling up social health insurance coverage; the data from this study could serve as one input when setting reimbursement rates for HIV/AIDS services to help ensure that providers are adequately reimbursed for their services.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6541345PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0216774PLOS

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