In the interests of time: improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations

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Standard

In the interests of time : improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations. / Shattock, Andrew J.; Kerr, Cliff C; Stuart, Robyn Margaret; Masaki, Emiko ; Fraser, Nicole ; Benedikt, Clemens ; Wilson, David P.; Gray, Richard T .

I: International AIDS Society. Journal, Bind 19, Nr. 1, 20627, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Shattock, AJ, Kerr, CC, Stuart, RM, Masaki, E, Fraser, N, Benedikt, C, Wilson, DP & Gray, RT 2016, 'In the interests of time: improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations', International AIDS Society. Journal, bind 19, nr. 1, 20627. https://doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.1.20627

APA

Shattock, A. J., Kerr, C. C., Stuart, R. M., Masaki, E., Fraser, N., Benedikt, C., Wilson, D. P., & Gray, R. T. (2016). In the interests of time: improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations. International AIDS Society. Journal, 19(1), [20627]. https://doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.1.20627

Vancouver

Shattock AJ, Kerr CC, Stuart RM, Masaki E, Fraser N, Benedikt C o.a. In the interests of time: improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations. International AIDS Society. Journal. 2016;19(1). 20627. https://doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.1.20627

Author

Shattock, Andrew J. ; Kerr, Cliff C ; Stuart, Robyn Margaret ; Masaki, Emiko ; Fraser, Nicole ; Benedikt, Clemens ; Wilson, David P. ; Gray, Richard T . / In the interests of time : improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations. I: International AIDS Society. Journal. 2016 ; Bind 19, Nr. 1.

Bibtex

@article{2e6d6f668cb8441aa4e376048a2a990a,
title = "In the interests of time: improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations",
abstract = "Introduction: International investment in the response to HIV and AIDS has plateaued and its future level is uncertain. With many countries committed to ending the epidemic, it is essential to allocate available resources efficiently over different response periods to maximize impact. The objective of this study is to propose a technique to determine the optimal allocation of funds over time across a set of HIV programmes to achieve desirable health outcomes.Methods: We developed a technique to determine the optimal time-varying allocation of funds (1) when the future annual HIV budget is pre-defined and (2) when the total budget over a period is pre-defined, but the year-on-year budget is to be optimally determined. We use this methodology with Optima, an HIV transmission model that uses non-linear relationships between programme spending and associated programmatic outcomes to quantify the expected epidemiological impact of spending. We apply these methods to data collected from Zambia to determine the optimal distribution of resources to fund the right programmes, for the right people, at the right time.Results and discussion: Considering realistic implementation and ethical constraints, we estimate that the optimal time-varying redistribution of the 2014 Zambian HIV budget between 2015 and 2025 will lead to a 7.6% (7.3% to 7.8%) decrease in cumulative new HIV infections compared with a baseline scenario where programme allocations remain at 2014 levels. This compares to a 5.1% (4.6% to 5.6%) reduction in new infections using an optimal allocation with constant programme spending that recommends unrealistic programmatic changes. Contrasting priorities for programme funding arise when assessing outcomes for a five-year funding period over 5-, 10- and 20-year time horizons.Conclusions: Countries increasingly face the need to do more with the resources available. The methodology presented here can aid decision-makers in planning as to when to expand or contract programmes and to which coverage levels to maximize impact.",
author = "Shattock, {Andrew J.} and Kerr, {Cliff C} and Stuart, {Robyn Margaret} and Emiko Masaki and Nicole Fraser and Clemens Benedikt and Wilson, {David P.} and Gray, {Richard T}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.7448/IAS.19.1.20627",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
journal = "International AIDS Society. Journal",
issn = "1758-2652",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - In the interests of time

T2 - improving HIV allocative efficiency modelling via optimal time-varying allocations

AU - Shattock, Andrew J.

AU - Kerr, Cliff C

AU - Stuart, Robyn Margaret

AU - Masaki, Emiko

AU - Fraser, Nicole

AU - Benedikt, Clemens

AU - Wilson, David P.

AU - Gray, Richard T

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Introduction: International investment in the response to HIV and AIDS has plateaued and its future level is uncertain. With many countries committed to ending the epidemic, it is essential to allocate available resources efficiently over different response periods to maximize impact. The objective of this study is to propose a technique to determine the optimal allocation of funds over time across a set of HIV programmes to achieve desirable health outcomes.Methods: We developed a technique to determine the optimal time-varying allocation of funds (1) when the future annual HIV budget is pre-defined and (2) when the total budget over a period is pre-defined, but the year-on-year budget is to be optimally determined. We use this methodology with Optima, an HIV transmission model that uses non-linear relationships between programme spending and associated programmatic outcomes to quantify the expected epidemiological impact of spending. We apply these methods to data collected from Zambia to determine the optimal distribution of resources to fund the right programmes, for the right people, at the right time.Results and discussion: Considering realistic implementation and ethical constraints, we estimate that the optimal time-varying redistribution of the 2014 Zambian HIV budget between 2015 and 2025 will lead to a 7.6% (7.3% to 7.8%) decrease in cumulative new HIV infections compared with a baseline scenario where programme allocations remain at 2014 levels. This compares to a 5.1% (4.6% to 5.6%) reduction in new infections using an optimal allocation with constant programme spending that recommends unrealistic programmatic changes. Contrasting priorities for programme funding arise when assessing outcomes for a five-year funding period over 5-, 10- and 20-year time horizons.Conclusions: Countries increasingly face the need to do more with the resources available. The methodology presented here can aid decision-makers in planning as to when to expand or contract programmes and to which coverage levels to maximize impact.

AB - Introduction: International investment in the response to HIV and AIDS has plateaued and its future level is uncertain. With many countries committed to ending the epidemic, it is essential to allocate available resources efficiently over different response periods to maximize impact. The objective of this study is to propose a technique to determine the optimal allocation of funds over time across a set of HIV programmes to achieve desirable health outcomes.Methods: We developed a technique to determine the optimal time-varying allocation of funds (1) when the future annual HIV budget is pre-defined and (2) when the total budget over a period is pre-defined, but the year-on-year budget is to be optimally determined. We use this methodology with Optima, an HIV transmission model that uses non-linear relationships between programme spending and associated programmatic outcomes to quantify the expected epidemiological impact of spending. We apply these methods to data collected from Zambia to determine the optimal distribution of resources to fund the right programmes, for the right people, at the right time.Results and discussion: Considering realistic implementation and ethical constraints, we estimate that the optimal time-varying redistribution of the 2014 Zambian HIV budget between 2015 and 2025 will lead to a 7.6% (7.3% to 7.8%) decrease in cumulative new HIV infections compared with a baseline scenario where programme allocations remain at 2014 levels. This compares to a 5.1% (4.6% to 5.6%) reduction in new infections using an optimal allocation with constant programme spending that recommends unrealistic programmatic changes. Contrasting priorities for programme funding arise when assessing outcomes for a five-year funding period over 5-, 10- and 20-year time horizons.Conclusions: Countries increasingly face the need to do more with the resources available. The methodology presented here can aid decision-makers in planning as to when to expand or contract programmes and to which coverage levels to maximize impact.

U2 - 10.7448/IAS.19.1.20627

DO - 10.7448/IAS.19.1.20627

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

JO - International AIDS Society. Journal

JF - International AIDS Society. Journal

SN - 1758-2652

IS - 1

M1 - 20627

ER -

ID: 157461861