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Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa

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Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa. / Pillai, Natasha; Foster, Nicola; Hanifa, Yasmeen et al.
In: PLoS ONE, Vol. 14, No. 2, e0210622, 11.02.2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pillai, N, Foster, N, Hanifa, Y, Ndlovu, N, Fielding, K, Churchyard, G, Chihota, V, Grant, AD & Vassall, A 2019, 'Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa', PLoS ONE, vol. 14, no. 2, e0210622. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210622

APA

Pillai, N., Foster, N., Hanifa, Y., Ndlovu, N., Fielding, K., Churchyard, G., Chihota, V., Grant, A. D., & Vassall, A. (2019). Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa. PLoS ONE, 14(2), Article e0210622. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210622

Vancouver

Pillai N, Foster N, Hanifa Y, Ndlovu N, Fielding K, Churchyard G et al. Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa. PLoS ONE. 2019 Feb 11;14(2):e0210622. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210622

Author

Pillai, Natasha ; Foster, Nicola ; Hanifa, Yasmeen et al. / Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa. In: PLoS ONE. 2019 ; Vol. 14, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{7a7f1e3f2c2f4ab880a382bca216bd64,
title = "Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa",
abstract = "Purpose To quantify costs to patients of accessing HIV care prior to ART initiation. Materials and methods Using a cross-sectional study design, costs incurred by HIV-positive patients prior to ART initiation were estimated at urban primary healthcare facilities in South Africa. Costs included direct costs, indirect (productivity) costs, carer and coping costs (value of assets sold and money borrowed). The percentage of individual income spent on healthcare was calculated and compared by patient income tertiles and CD4 count strata. Results 289 patients (69% female, mean age 37 (SD: 10) years, median CD4 317 (IQR: 138–494) cells/mm3) were interviewed. The total mean monthly cost of pre-ART care was US$15.71. Indirect costs accounted for $2.59 (16.49%) of this when time was valued using the patient{\textquoteright}s reported income. The mean monthly patient costs were $31.61, $12.78, $12.65 and $11.93 for those with a CD4 count <100, 101–350, 351–500 and >500 cells/mm3 respectively. The percentage of individual income spent on healthcare was 7.25% for those with a CD4 count <100 cells/mm3 and 4.05% for those with a CD4 count >500 cells/mm3. Conclusions Despite the provision of charge-free services at public clinics, care prior to ART initiation can be costly, particularly for the poor and unemployed. Our study adds to the growing body of evidence that highlights the need to consider policies to reduce the economic barriers to HIV service access, particularly for low income or unwell patient groups, such as improving access to disability grants.",
author = "Natasha Pillai and Nicola Foster and Yasmeen Hanifa and Nontobeko Ndlovu and Katherine Fielding and Gavin Churchyard and Violet Chihota and Grant, {Alison D} and Anna Vassall",
year = "2019",
month = feb,
day = "11",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0210622",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Patient costs incurred by people living with HIV/AIDS prior to ART initiation in primary healthcare facilities in Gauteng, South Africa

AU - Pillai, Natasha

AU - Foster, Nicola

AU - Hanifa, Yasmeen

AU - Ndlovu, Nontobeko

AU - Fielding, Katherine

AU - Churchyard, Gavin

AU - Chihota, Violet

AU - Grant, Alison D

AU - Vassall, Anna

PY - 2019/2/11

Y1 - 2019/2/11

N2 - Purpose To quantify costs to patients of accessing HIV care prior to ART initiation. Materials and methods Using a cross-sectional study design, costs incurred by HIV-positive patients prior to ART initiation were estimated at urban primary healthcare facilities in South Africa. Costs included direct costs, indirect (productivity) costs, carer and coping costs (value of assets sold and money borrowed). The percentage of individual income spent on healthcare was calculated and compared by patient income tertiles and CD4 count strata. Results 289 patients (69% female, mean age 37 (SD: 10) years, median CD4 317 (IQR: 138–494) cells/mm3) were interviewed. The total mean monthly cost of pre-ART care was US$15.71. Indirect costs accounted for $2.59 (16.49%) of this when time was valued using the patient’s reported income. The mean monthly patient costs were $31.61, $12.78, $12.65 and $11.93 for those with a CD4 count <100, 101–350, 351–500 and >500 cells/mm3 respectively. The percentage of individual income spent on healthcare was 7.25% for those with a CD4 count <100 cells/mm3 and 4.05% for those with a CD4 count >500 cells/mm3. Conclusions Despite the provision of charge-free services at public clinics, care prior to ART initiation can be costly, particularly for the poor and unemployed. Our study adds to the growing body of evidence that highlights the need to consider policies to reduce the economic barriers to HIV service access, particularly for low income or unwell patient groups, such as improving access to disability grants.

AB - Purpose To quantify costs to patients of accessing HIV care prior to ART initiation. Materials and methods Using a cross-sectional study design, costs incurred by HIV-positive patients prior to ART initiation were estimated at urban primary healthcare facilities in South Africa. Costs included direct costs, indirect (productivity) costs, carer and coping costs (value of assets sold and money borrowed). The percentage of individual income spent on healthcare was calculated and compared by patient income tertiles and CD4 count strata. Results 289 patients (69% female, mean age 37 (SD: 10) years, median CD4 317 (IQR: 138–494) cells/mm3) were interviewed. The total mean monthly cost of pre-ART care was US$15.71. Indirect costs accounted for $2.59 (16.49%) of this when time was valued using the patient’s reported income. The mean monthly patient costs were $31.61, $12.78, $12.65 and $11.93 for those with a CD4 count <100, 101–350, 351–500 and >500 cells/mm3 respectively. The percentage of individual income spent on healthcare was 7.25% for those with a CD4 count <100 cells/mm3 and 4.05% for those with a CD4 count >500 cells/mm3. Conclusions Despite the provision of charge-free services at public clinics, care prior to ART initiation can be costly, particularly for the poor and unemployed. Our study adds to the growing body of evidence that highlights the need to consider policies to reduce the economic barriers to HIV service access, particularly for low income or unwell patient groups, such as improving access to disability grants.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0210622

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0210622

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 2

M1 - e0210622

ER -