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      Interventions to Drive Uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision—A Collection of Impact Evaluation Evidence

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          Abstract

          In the last few decades, significant progress has been made in improving population health outcomes. This is largely attributable to the development of effective public-health tools—diagnostics, vaccines, other prevention technologies, and treatment regimens. Advances in delivery have enabled these technologies and interventions to reach end users in even the most remote areas. However, although uptake of services has followed, the pace has often been suboptimal. The global health field has come a long way in ensuring that services are available, but when it comes to motivating people to be better consumers of treatment and of preventive health services, there are relatively few proven interventions that promote uptake. Voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) is one program facing such a challenge in eliciting uptake of services among large numbers of men and boys. 1 VMMC is being scaled up in 14 eastern and southern African countries as a key HIV prevention intervention. 2 To date, more than 11.7 million circumcisions have been performed, against a target of 20 million by 2016. 3 A large proportion who have received services are adolescents, 4 but for the VMMC program to achieve its intended rapid impact on the HIV epidemic, a greater proportion of older, sexually active, and high-risk males must access services. The public health field needs new approaches and interventions to attract and motivate men to be circumcised. A systematic approach and framework to improve demand for VMMC has been recommended. 5 The 4 components of this approach are (1) a greater emphasis on generating insights into the factors that drive or limit men's motivation and ability to undergo VMMC, (2) developing an innovative and comprehensive portfolio of demand generation solutions based on these insights, (3) implementing a proven portfolio of interventions at scale and in a coordinated manner to achieve high levels of coverage, and (4) a robust measurement and evaluation agenda. A key component of this approach is thus to generate evidence on which interventions work and should be scaled up to drive greater efficiency and effectiveness within programs. Equally important is knowing which behavior change interventions are not effective. Only a few evaluations of VMMC demand generation interventions have been published to date, which highlights the need for greater evidence. The collection of impact evaluations in this supplement presents a rich and unique body of evidence on the effectiveness of various demand generation interventions for VMMC. It also provides an opportunity to analyze the science of evaluation in relation to demand generation interventions within the context of large-scale national programs. The approach taken to design and implement these interventions is interesting and worth highlighting. The International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie), a grant-making nonprofit organization that promotes evidence-based policy making using impact evaluation, played a funding, convening, and technical support role. 3ie convened a group of evaluators, country stakeholders, and program implementers in a “matchmaking” workshop in April 2013. 6 Teams were formed to work on intervention design, such that the interventions were field-driven and realistic, yet also included an evaluation component. The objective was to ensure rigorous assessment of impact and that effective interventions could be translated into large-scale programs and integrated into national VMMC policies and practices. The subsequent request for proposals produced 7 pilot interventions to increase the demand for VMMC with embedded qualitative and impact evaluations to determine whether and to what degree these interventions were effective. The program was designed to fund low-cost, rapid impact evaluations of the pilot interventions. Here, we synthesize and reflect on the approaches taken and the findings, in their relevance both to VMMC and to a broader array of large-scale global health programs. HOW TO, OR NOT, DRIVE VMMC UPTAKE?—INSIGHT FROM THE STUDIES This collection includes 7 impact evaluations conducted in 6 of the 14 VMMC priority countries, one qualitative study and two analyses of methods. Table 1 lists the evaluation studies and includes 2 additional relevant studies not included in this supplement, which complement or help us interpret the findings from studies. The VMMC demand generation interventions addressed different possible barriers and potential facilitators influencing men's decisions to undergo VMMC as identified by acceptability studies. 7 The possible barriers include fear of pain or adverse events, a period of sexual abstinence and threats to masculinity, opportunity cost of procedure in the form of lost wages from undergoing the procedure, and religious and cultural norms. Potential facilitators include incentives, delivery of information, social pressure, and peer and intimate partner influence. Each pilot intervention was designed to address one or more of these barriers and facilitators. Interventions explored both behavior change communication and compensation, including conditional compensation (direct economic compensation and lottery-based rewards), providing information using influencers (use of intimate partners to inform and encourage men, peers, and male role models in sports-based interventions), messages delivered through cell phones, and information postcards that explored message framing. Most of the interventions targeted males 18 years and above because reaching males of this age has been a challenge in most countries. Two interventions (in Kenya and South Africa) offered direct fixed financial compensation to men seeking circumcision at clinics. 8,9 In the South Africa intervention, to avoid risk of coercion, compensation was based on VMMC counseling only and not MC, although over 90% underwent the procedure. Both studies found a positive and statistically significant effect on uptake of circumcision from fixed financial compensation. An earlier study also in Kenya also found a positive effect of food vouchers on VMMC uptake. 10 An in-depth qualitative study that explored how incentives influenced decision making in the Kenya intervention is especially insightful given concerns about the potential coercive effect of economic incentives. 11 The study found that compensation addressed the major structural barrier of loss of wages and motivated men to act on the decision they had already made to undergo circumcision. The compensation did not result in uptake by men who were not interested in circumcision, showing that compensation did not adversely affect the voluntary nature of the procedure. Men reported several reasons for not responding to incentives—the amount was perceived as too low or insufficient to offset opportunity costs, or there were other barriers not addressed by the monetary compensation. These studies provide additional evidence that fixed compensation can increase uptake of VMMC without influencing decisions in a coercive way. In contrast to the fixed compensation interventions, the 2 interventions that provided material incentives through a lottery (Kenya and Tanzania) did not produce statistically significant effects. 9,12 The hypothesis behind these interventions was that lotteries introduce an element of risk that might appeal to people who engage in higher risk behavior, such as men who engage in high-risk sex. It relies on the principle that people generally overestimate their chance of winning big prizes. One intervention in Zambia that built in peer influence provided a small financial reward to men who referred other men for circumcision; however, the intervention did not produce a significant effect in this study. 13 Building on the theory of social learning and using peer influence, sports-based interventions provide a possible vehicle for behavior change. A previous evaluation of a 60-minute, interactive, soccer-themed educational intervention, bundled with cell phone message reminders, referral cards, and educational posters, with males 18 years and older in Zimbabwe [Male Circumcision Uptake through Soccer (MCUTS)] showed a weak association. 14 The intervention reported in this supplement was the same soccer-based intervention used in MCUTS, but with additional logistical and behavioral follow-up, and targeted this time at adolescent males. 15 This study found a larger effect than for MCUTS and included a qualitative component to tease out which parts of the intervention package led to the observed change in VMMC uptake. In the evaluation of this study, the approach was found to be highly acceptable with participation and personal interaction of the soccer coach as a key factor associated with uptake. Participants valued the coaches' discussion of their personal experiences with VMMC and willingness to accompany the boys to the VMMC clinic. 16 Educational messaging to individual clients was examined in 2 studies. The SMS intervention in Zambia, which provided both conventional and client-tailored cell phone messages, did not show any effectiveness. 17 The information-only postcards in South Africa also found no impact on VMMC uptake. 8 These findings are likely due to the fact that lack of information about VMMC and its protective effects is no longer a major barrier to uptake and the information provided did not add to existing client knowledge. In fact, knowledge about VMMC is relatively high in most of the 14 VMMC priority countries because of many years of information campaigns. However, the challenge message (“Are you tough enough?”) did produce a positive and statistically significant effect, although much smaller than the effect from compensation. It has been hypothesized that female partners of men could play a role in their decision making to get circumcised. A natural experiment intervention in Uganda was implemented whereby pregnant women in their third trimester were recruited at antenatal clinics and empowered with a package of comprehensive information about VMMC and trained in negotiation skills. 18 The timing was chosen because of the unique opportunity offered by childbirth to align the periods of sexual abstinence postpartum and postcircumcision. However, the intervention did not prove to be effective for increasing uptake. While most women in the intervention group did deliver the VMMC message, many shared mixed experiences, and two-thirds did not feel comfortable engaging their partners in the conversation. A separate intervention in South Africa using “information postcards” to some degree also explored the role of women. The postcards distributed to men stated that a recent survey indicated that among partners of uncircumcised men, 2 of 3 would prefer that their partners be circumcised, in addition to providing basic information on the protective effect of VMMC. The effect size was small and statistically insignificant for the intervention. These studies highlight the need for greater evidence on the potential role of women in men's decision-making, and in combination with findings from the other interventions perhaps indicate that male peers might be more effective channels of influence. REFLECTIONS AND LESSONS FROM THE COLLECTION This collection of impact evaluations and associated analysis provides a rich and unique body of evidence on the effectiveness of various demand generation interventions for VMMC. The study findings suggest that financial compensation designed to relieve the opportunity or transportation costs associated with undergoing the procedure can increase the uptake of VMMC. There is also evidence that programs using peer influence can be effective, although so far only sports-based programs demonstrate a strong effect. Even among the effective demand generation interventions presented, the largest effect sizes were 7.6 and 7.1 percentage-point differences in uptake (for interventions in Zimbabwe and Kenya, respectively). These differences were statistically significant, but uptake rates are low considering the goal of 80% circumcision coverage. Whether interventions such as these can make a big difference in coverage may depend on several factors. First, the interventions were evaluated for their impact after only a short period (in most cases 3 months, Table 1). However, a recent unpublished study suggests that for some men, it may take up to 2 years from the time of learning about VMMC to circumcision, so the short intervention period in these studies may be insufficient to result in uptake for many men. Second, it is possible that the barrier addressed by the intervention is not a significant one—for example, information on the benefits of VMMC may not address a barrier, since by now, most men are aware of these. Third, the different interventions evaluated here address barriers at different stages during the decision-making process for circumcision. From this standpoint, each intervention targets just the subset of men at the applicable stage for the intervention. Likewise, the above-mentioned factors may have also contributed to the low levels of uptake of the interventions that were not found to be effective. As different men have different barriers, there is a need for a combination of demand-side interventions to drive high levels of uptake of VMMC. TABLE 1. Summary of VMMC Demand Generation Impact Evaluations Overall, these studies also highlight the need for more comprehensive, innovative, and context-specific insight generation work. 5 The design of many of these interventions would have benefitted from a much richer and context-specific body of evidence, which currently does not exist. Lessons Learned From VMMC Demand Generation Interventions Stakeholder engagement is crucial from design to implementation to ensure acceptability, context-driven design, and successful translation and integration of results into programs. Intervention design should be based on context-specific barriers and enablers that influence how the local population makes choices about health services. Effect sizes of the individual intervention evaluations can be generally small, highlighting the need for (1) longer intervention evaluation times and (2) evaluating a portfolio of interventions that address a comprehensive set of barriers affecting the decision-making of the target population. Qualitative components integrated into impact evaluations can provide important data that uncover “why” interventions do or do not work. Offering financial compensation appeared not to have a coercive effect on men's willingness to undergo VMMC. In addition to randomized controlled trials, there are other evaluation methods that can be used to evaluate interventions to drive demand that take into account the complex and evolving nature of programs. The studies presented here underscore the value of coupling impact evaluations with qualitative components to uncover the underlying mechanisms that help explain the observed results. For example, the qualitative data that accompanied the Kenya fixed-financial compensation intervention highlight the noncoercive nature of incentives and show which groups of men responded to this intervention. In Uganda, the qualitative data indicated that empowering women with messages was not enough because many did not feel comfortable in engaging in conversation with their male partners. The evidence provided here is a first step. Interventions that show significant impact on circumcision uptake will need to be introduced at scale and further evidence collected on how they affect circumcision uptake levels in combination with all other program elements, old and new. Programs are complex, fluid, dynamic, and ever-changing. The contextual and programmatic changes may diminish or enhance the effects of interventions seen in the experimental evaluation studies. This calls for a different measurement approach—one that is more integrated within program and is ongoing. How relevant are these country-specific results for other VMMC programs in the 14 prioritized countries? Context, intervention implementation, and target population, among many other factors, collectively affect the results yielded by a specific intervention within a larger public-health program. Programs should evaluate the potential impact of these interventions in their particular context. Given previous impact evaluative evidence, we suggest a rapid and implementation science approach to testing. This collection represents one of the most comprehensive sets of studies addressing demand-side challenges in a large-scale public-health program. Although the interventions tested are specific to VMMC, the approaches used and lessons learned could be applied to other public-health programs. Along with evidence from other fields, these evaluations contribute to the body of evidence on different types of interventions, such as use of financial compensation, helping the community develop a more nuanced understanding of the circumstances in which they become a useful tool to drive uptake of services. Further innovation for demand-side interventions could benefit from comprehensive and context-specific research to understand the behavioral and psychological barriers and triggers for VMMC, and to uncover the motivations, aspirations, and decision-making processes of men regarding circumcision. These findings could inform the design of not a single, but rather a comprehensive portfolio of demand generation interventions that would collectively encourage a much larger group of men toward circumcision.

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          Effect of providing conditional economic compensation on uptake of voluntary medical male circumcision in Kenya: a randomized clinical trial.

          Novel strategies are needed to increase the uptake of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) in sub-Saharan Africa and enhance the effectiveness of male circumcision as an HIV prevention strategy.
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            Achieving the HIV Prevention Impact of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision: Lessons and Challenges for Managing Programs

            Summary Points Large-scale implementation of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) in 14 priority countries of Eastern and Southern Africa has the potential to significantly reduce heterosexual transmission of HIV to males, saving lives, averting suffering, and avoiding health care costs. Resource and capacity constraints pose a serious challenge to the ability of the priority countries to reach their goals for VMMC scale-up. The 13 papers in this collection examine issues of service quality, demand creation, cost, and efficiency faced by governments, donors, and programs. Systematic, evidence-based management of programs and a dynamic culture of learning are proposed to help meet the challenges of VMMC scale-up. Recommendations include greater prioritization and funding of VMMC, strategic targeting and demand creation, a focus on programmatic efficiencies, and exploration of new technologies. Further recommendations are for strengthened data use, improving governments' program management capacity, strategizing for sustainability, and maintaining a flexible scale-up strategy. Introduction Voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) has been shown to be effective in reducing the sexual transmission of HIV from women to men (Figure 1) [1]–[4]. Fourteen countries in Eastern and Southern Africa with high HIV prevalence and low levels of male circumcision (MC) are following the recommendations of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) to expand VMMC services as an HIV prevention strategy [5],[6]. These countries are Botswana, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Uganda, the United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. Modeling studies done in 2009–2011 showed that in these 14 priority countries, achieving 80% circumcision prevalence among males aged 15–49 within five years (“catch-up”), and maintaining this coverage rate in subsequent years (“sustainability”), could avert 3.4 million new HIV infections within 15 years and generate treatment and care savings of US$16.5 billion [7],[8]. VMMC is a highly cost-effective HIV prevention strategy for both generalized and high-prevalence HIV epidemics [7]. It differs from most other prevention methods (e.g., pre-exposure prophylaxis, sexual behavior change, or condom use) in that it only requires a one-time action in order to provide continuous benefits. VMMC has political support at both the global and national levels. Most of the 14 priority countries have developed strategic plans and established infrastructure to implement the plans and scale up VMMC interventions. (These efforts are referred to collectively in this paper as “the VMMC program” or “the program.”) 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001641.g001 Figure 1 Timeline and key milestones of the voluntary medical male circumcision program in 14 priority countries. 6 million circumcisions listed in 2013 is an estimate by PEPFAR and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. RCTs, randomized controlled trials; TWG, technical working group; TAG, technical advisory group; MOVE, Models for Optimizing the Volume and Efficiency of MC services. Nevertheless, the VMMC strategy faces challenges at multiple levels. The goals set out in the Joint Strategic Action Framework (JSAF) are highly ambitious: to circumcise 20.2 million men in five years (2012–2016) across 14 African countries [6]. Furthermore, the choice to be circumcised involves deep-seated values, beliefs, and motivational factors that vary with ethnic, religious, and cultural identities, and must be addressed effectively to generate demand for circumcision. While at a broad level the program is increasing its outputs each year (Figures 2 and 3), the current growth rate of the program is not sufficient to reach the JSAF's goal of 80% coverage by 2016 (Figure 4). 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001641.g002 Figure 2 Scale-up of voluntary medical male circumcision program and coverage in 14 priority countries, aggregate, 2008–2013. Number of circumcisions completed each year in millions. Source of 2008–2012 data is the WHO 2012 VMMC report [38]. 2013 numbers have been estimated using data from PEPFAR and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. *CAGR, compound annual growth rate, calculated based on the average proportional growth each year. CAGR (t0,tn)  =  (V(tn)/V(t0))1/(tn − to) −1, where V(t0) is the start value and V(tn) is the finish value and tn − t0 is the number of years. 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001641.g003 Figure 3 Scale-up of voluntary medical male circumcision program and coverage in 14 priority countries, 2008–2012. Totals reflect progress through 2012. Percentage figures represent the achieved proportion of the target of 80% coverage among males ages 15–49, but totals include circumcisions done for all age groups, regardless of the age-range target. Data obtained from WHO 2012 VMMC report [38]. 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001641.g004 Figure 4 Scale-up of voluntary medical male circumcision program and coverage in 14 priority countries: growth scenarios, 2008−2016. Source of 2008–2012 data is the WHO 2012 VMMC report [38]; 2013 figures are estimates, and 2014–2016 figures are projections. In the “no growth” scenario, the program continues to perform the same numbers of circumcisions each year as in 2013. In the “current growth” scenario, the program continues the trend of historical growth rate. This collection of research and review articles, “Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision for HIV Prevention: Improving Quality, Efficiency, Cost Effectiveness, and Demand for Services during an Accelerated Scale-up,” presents new research that underscores both the challenges and the opportunities for the accelerated scale-up of VMMC (Box 1). This review article synthesizes and briefly describes the findings, which focus on four key areas of the VMMC program: (1) quality of services, (2) demand creation, (3) cost, and (4) efficiencies for service delivery. Building on these findings, we propose a set of priority focus areas for the global VMMC program and for the governments of the priority countries, and we highlight new areas of opportunity to accelerate scale-up. Box 1. Scope of the Collection The PLOS Collection “Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision for HIV Prevention: Improving Quality, Efficiency, Cost Effectiveness, and Demand for Services during an Accelerated Scale-up” includes 13 research papers and an overview that highlight key findings from several countries that have moved to high-volume VMMC services, explore challenges faced, and offer recommendations for programs as they scale up VMMC services. It focuses on the following: Quality and efficiency of VMMC services – results of the Systematic Monitoring of the Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Scale Up (SYMMACS) facility-based survey conducted in Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe Costing and Impact – findings from three studies by PEPFAR through the USAID funded Health Policy Project of interest to decision-makers determining allocation of HIV prevention resources Demand Creation – studies from Kenya, Zimbabwe, and Tanzania highlight importance of tailoring demand-creation interventions and service delivery models to specific age group of clients Quality of VMMC Services Ensuring safe and efficient execution of the VMMC procedure and high-quality pre- and post-procedure services, even as programs expand rapidly, is essential in order to realize the full impact of VMMC, reduce program costs, and increase and sustain demand for the service. While most previous quality assessments focused on adverse events in clients [9], two papers in this collection examine facility preparedness for providing quality surgical services using data across two years of program scale-up. Jennings and colleagues undertook a comparative assessment of facility preparedness and surgery in Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe through direct observation [10]. Results for facility preparedness were mixed: in some settings, improvements were seen over time, while in others, early problems that went uncorrected prior to expansion were amplified system-wide at scale. Rech and colleagues explored in further detail the implications of scale-up in South Africa [11]. They assessed readiness to provide quality services and quality of surgical care in 2011 and 2012. Rapid scale-up in South Africa led to human resources being stretched too thinly, with negative effects on quality overall. These studies, and a further study of surgical efficiencies and quality of surgical technique in VMMC in Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe [12], remind us that while it is possible to maintain high standards of surgical care during rapid scale-up (Zimbabwe is a good example), there is always a need to manage adverse events by proactively following up with clients and facilitating postoperative services. As programs expand, it is also necessary to improve initial and refresher training for providers on all aspects of the VMMC service package, strengthen ongoing quality and performance assessments, reinforce supervision and mentoring, and create functional systems to continuously assess and improve service quality. Demand Creation There is general agreement among the authors about the need to foster greater demand among men for VMMC in order to achieve the desired reduction in HIV incidence [6]. Although most programs aim to reach men aged 15–49, those over 25 are underrepresented thus far in the scale-up [13]. Two studies have explored barriers to and facilitators of demand [14], and three papers in this collection specifically address men aged 25 and above, a group for whom the reasons for low demand are not well understood, and whose contribution to HIV prevalence is currently being evaluated by new modeling work. Macintyre and colleagues examined barriers to and facilitators of demand in Turkana County, Kenya, a traditionally non-circumcising community [15]. Older married men did not consider themselves at risk of acquiring HIV, and they echoed the findings of other literature on acceptability in viewing circumcision as more appropriate for younger men, whom they perceived as being at higher risk of HIV [16]–[20]. The authors argue that promoting circumcision as a modern, biomedical procedure rather than as a cultural practice (which may be associated with other tribal groups or young men's rites of passage) will be an important demand-creation message in this particular setting. In Zimbabwe, Hatzold and colleagues conducted quantitative and qualitative studies to explore barriers to and motivating factors for VMMC and to assess the use of existing VMMC communication channels to promote VMMC [21]. A large majority of the respondents had heard about VMMC, mainly through radio. Prevention of HIV was the most cited motivator for circumcision, but men were also motivated by prospects for improved hygiene. Non-HIV-related benefits could be part of the messaging for demand-creation activities. Only 11% of all the men surveyed had been circumcised, and among male respondents expressing an unwillingness to become circumcised, fear of pain was the most frequently cited reason. The paper does not directly identify the reasons why men who expressed a willingness to undergo VMMC had not yet done so, and further research on this would be useful. However, three primary predictors of VMMC uptake were identified: self-efficacy (the belief that one can make the decision oneself to be circumcised), social support from friends, and availability of VMMC services. The study of the modality and intensity of service delivery in Tanzania and Zimbabwe by Adamu and colleagues [22] shows that campaigns conducted during school holidays lead to higher attendance by younger clients, an effect enhanced in Tanzania by the cultural preference for circumcision at a younger age [23]. This underscores the importance of considering cultural preferences and service delivery timing when designing demand-creation approaches. Costs While modeling showed that scaling up VMMC to 80% coverage among men aged 15–49 in the 14 priority countries could result in savings of US$16.5 billion in treatment costs, the resources required to achieve this are substantial—an estimated US$2 billion [7],[8],[24]. Three papers in this collection undertake unit cost analyses to identify the cost drivers and explore where efficiency gains are possible. Bollinger and colleagues (data from Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia) and Menon and colleagues (data from three regions of Tanzania) use programmatic and financial data (including direct and indirect costs) from VMMC facilities to determine the unit cost of a surgical VMMC [24],[25]. Both studies illustrate that the two largest cost drivers are personnel (36% of costs) and commodities (28%), with ranges varying by country and model of service delivery. An economies-of-scale analysis suggests that further cost reductions will be seen as the supply side of the program plateaus [24]. These studies highlight the possibility of further efficiency gains in the personnel and consumables components of the program by maximizing efficiencies in human and material resources and technology. Three independent modeling studies, including one in this issue, using different starting assumptions, have forecast little if any cost savings with the initial use of circumcision devices such as PrePex and Shang Ring [26]–[28]. Njeuhmeli and colleagues note that the single greatest determinant of unit cost was site utilization, with underutilization doubling the per-procedure price, regardless of whether circumcision was device-based or surgical [28]. Device-based circumcision has yet to be provided as a routine procedure under efficiency conditions, as surgical circumcision is currently provided. If device-based service models function closer to maximum capacity, decreased unit costs could be realized. However, there will always be a need for national programs to provide surgical circumcision for men who are not eligible for devices or who prefer surgery. A major limitation of the cost studies in this collection is that they do not include the costs of demand creation nor analyze how increased spending on demand creation might affect the actual demand for services. This is partly because of limitations in the available data. In future studies, it will be important to address this knowledge gap. Efficiencies Several papers in this collection explore improvements in the efficiency of service delivery, with specific emphasis on efficiencies around the surgical procedure, using data from Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe [9]. None of the four countries surveyed had adopted all six elements of surgical efficiency tracked by the data, which were (1) use of multiple surgical beds, (2) use of pre-bundled surgical supply kits, (3) task-shifting, (4) task-sharing, (5) use of forceps-guided surgical method, and (6) use of electrocautery. The use of the forceps-guided surgical method was the only element adopted by all countries. Rech and colleagues found that innovative human resource models such as the sharing of tasks among a coordinated team of clinicians, as well as electrocautery and the use of multiple beds, reduced the overall procedure time and increased the number of clients served by the primary surgeon in a given period of time [12]. An encouraging finding was that the quality of surgical technique was not compromised by reducing the amount of time the primary provider spent with each client, meaning that quality was maintained in high-service-volume settings. In fact, in South Africa, reduced operating time was associated with higher surgical quality, which the authors suggest might be the result of experienced providers being more skilled and working more efficiently. While these papers focus on efficiencies that could be gained at the site level, an assessment of efficiency gains at the macro level of overall program delivery is also needed, as discussed below. Mavhu and colleagues found that providers held positive attitudes toward the six recommended elements of surgical efficiency in countries where national policies were supportive [29]. This study highlights the value of consulting with those who will implement policies at the service-delivery level. The finding that national policy bodies in South Africa and Zimbabwe did not adopt task-shifting—even though providers supported it—is significant, because task-shifting could alleviate the human resources constraint that is a major challenge to the scale-up of VMMC in these countries. Perry and colleagues identified factors associated with provider burnout (physical or emotional exhaustion as a result of prolonged stress or frustration) and explored a possible relationship between burnout and job satisfaction [30]. In 2012, more than three-fourths of providers surveyed in Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe reported that providing VMMC was personally fulfilling. Providers' median work span in VMMC was longest in Kenya (31 months), but the proportion of providers who reported that they were starting to experience burnout was much higher there (67%) than in the other three countries. However, the study failed to identify any correlates associated with burnout in Kenya. Discussion The VMMC program is an ambitious public health intervention. While it is estimated that close to 6 million circumcisions had been completed by the end of 2013, against a goal of 20.2 million by 2016, this progress should be viewed within the context of the recent and rapidly developing understanding of the importance of VMMC as an HIV prevention intervention (Figure 1). Less than three years after a consensus was reached to recommend VMMC as an additional HIV prevention intervention in countries with high HIV prevalence and low MC rates [6], 11 of the 14 priority countries had approved national VMMC strategies and operational plans. The program has been scaling up in many countries since then, with the result that the number of circumcisions performed each year, which in 2008 had been only 0.02 million, grew to an estimate of at least 2.8 million in 2013, representing a compound annual growth rate of 166% (Figure 2). Despite the rapid implementation and scale-up of VMMC programs and the doubling of the cumulative total VMMC procedures in the past year (from 3.2 million by the end of 2012 to an estimated 5.8–6 million by the end of 2013), progress at the country level has varied widely (Figure 3) and the year-on-year rate of growth in the number of VMMCs performed is declining (Figures 2 and 4). This is due to a combination of factors: the JSAF goal of reaching 80% of uncircumcised men by 2016 did not fully take into account country-specific constraints that have tempered the pace of scale-up, lack of sufficient demand, and insufficient funding from a broad base of international donors (the United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief [PEPFAR] has funded more than 80% of circumcisions to date). Modeling suggests that even if the current growth rate is maintained and adequate funds are forthcoming, the number of VMMCs completed by 2016 would fall about 3 million short of the JSAF goal of 20.2 million (Figure 4). This collection provides an opportunity to reflect on ways to maximize the potential of the VMMC program during the remainder of the accelerated scale-up period (until 2016) (Box 2). This means prioritizing strategies that can improve programmatic impact and efficiency in order to avert the greatest possible number of HIV infections through VMMC within realistic cost and capacity constraints, as well as taking into account funds available for VMMC. Box 2. Key Points from the Collection Quality of services: It is possible to maintain and even improve service quality, especially surgical performance, as VMMC is scaled up, but improved provider training is needed to strengthen quality of pre- and postoperative care and infection control. Costs: Personnel and consumables are the largest cost drivers, but costs may be reduced as programs scale up and economies of scale are achieved, as well as by improving service efficiency. Underutilization of service capacity increases unit costs more than any other variable, highlighting the importance of predictable demand and nimble service platforms so that sites are consistently performing as close to capacity as possible. Responsible public-sector pricing strategies for devices have the potential to reduce overall unit costs, and further discounts should be negotiated as procurement volumes increase. Demand creation: Messaging must be tailored to different age groups and to the cultural norms of different communities. Men aged 25 and above are less motivated to undergo VMMC. Studies suggest that we need to go beyond simple HIV messaging and present VMMC in terms of hygiene, appearance, attractiveness to partners, peer group norms, and modernity. Efficiencies: Adoption of various elements of surgical efficiency is variable between countries studied. Task-sharing, sharing, bundling of surgical instruments, and electrocautery are associated with surgical efficiency outcomes, and surgical quality need not be compromised by measures to reduce operating time. We believe it is essential to take a systematic approach to improving the design, implementation, and evaluation of the program. Several enabling factors and levers may accelerate and maximize the impact of scale-up (Figure 5). These enabling factors—leadership, policy, and to a certain extent funding—are largely in place both globally and in VMMC priority countries. Increased funding for VMMC is needed to meet the growing targets and outputs of the program. Given that PEPFAR is the predominant donor, getting other donors and governments to contribute is essential. In addition, the levers for scale identified in Figure 5 (government program management capacity, use of data for decision-making, and technologies) require further strengthening in order to match supply and demand. This challenge may be met by incorporating principles of managing large-scale enterprises such as standardization of service delivery and training, market segmentation, and data-driven management [31]. Building on the findings presented in this collection, we propose below a set of actions for the VMMC community. 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001641.g005 Figure 5 Enabling factors and levers to achieve scale and impact for the voluntary medical male circumcision program. Strong enabling factors of leadership, policy, and financing are needed to accelerate and maximize the impact of scale-up of the VMMC program. The levers for scale—government management capacity, use of data for decision-making, and technologies—are needed to match supply and demand. Action Recommendations Continue advocating for prioritization and funding for VMMC The program faces increasing competition for declining funding for HIV prevention and treatment. The funding need for VMMC remains significant, and continued evidence-based advocacy is necessary to secure funds for accelerated scale-up from a broad base of donors. One way to do this is to evaluate the population-level impact of those VMMC programs that have already been scaled up. Another is to continue to draw comparisons between VMMC and other HIV prevention programs, highlighting specifically that if VMMC coverage reaches the JSAF goal of 80%, it will prove the most cost-effective and cost-saving HIV prevention intervention in Eastern and Southern Africa. In addition, it does not require sustained adherence, and there is evidence that referrals made from the VMMC program increase HIV-positive males' access to treatment [32]. Increase program efficiency by identifying and prioritizing those most at risk of acquiring HIV Circumcisions performed on those males most at risk of acquiring HIV will have the greatest epidemiological impact in terms of HIV infections averted [7]. There is an opportunity to strategically prioritize subpopulations (for example, by age and geography) to maximize the program's impact and efficiency within the required time period, while also ensuring that VMMC is available to all males who want it. Given what is known about the relatively low uptake of VMMC among men aged 25 and above [14],[23], we also recommend more modeling to ascertain the relative contribution of this subgroup to overall infections averted in the short and long terms. Focus on program efficiency and quality at all levels, and on matching supply with demand While a large portion of this collection focuses on surgical efficiency or quality [9]–[12], the bigger challenge is overall programmatic efficiency. The challenge of scale-up can be approached as a management challenge that requires addressing each element of the delivery value chain (the specific activities that deliver the end product to the user), using time and resources appropriately, and matching supply with demand for VMMC services while working to increase both. Human resource constraints must be addressed in some places (e.g., through the sharing of clinical tasks [33]), while mechanisms to monitor the quality and safety of the rapidly expanding programs must also be enhanced [11],[12]. Advocacy for including surgical circumcision within the scope of practice for nurses (task-shifting) should be sustained in those countries that have not yet adopted it. Supply of VMMC services must be calibrated to meet demand and located in areas where it will reach the prioritized populations. Explore the role technologies, especially devices, can play in accelerating scale-up The cost of circumcision devices and other supply chain costs must be brought down considerably if devices are to reduce overall program costs. This will require advocacy as well as negotiation with manufacturers and suppliers in tandem with demand-creation activities. We recommend further study to ascertain whether devices make circumcision more attractive to men and to understand whether devices could assist with balancing supply and demand to help achieve needed programmatic efficiencies. It is also important to tailor demand-creation activities for devices in order to reach those who may already be aware of circumcision's benefits but who have avoided conventional surgical methods. Rethink demand creation through market segmentation and insights from other disciplines More needs to be done not only to stimulate demand for VMMC [15],[21],[22], but also to normalize it, or at least to better forecast the fluctuations in demand that are apparent in many places [15]. Barriers and facilitators to uptake of services must be understood, with male populations properly segmented demographically to make best use of limited resources. To date little research has looked at the male population as a market of consumers of an intervention with multiple benefits. A market research approach, along with insights from diverse fields such as behavioral economics and anthropology, can provide new tools to inform the development of new approaches. More funding should be allocated to systematically evaluate the effectiveness of the many approaches to creating and mobilizing demand. Those that show positive results should be taken to scale. Gather and use standardized, high-quality data for program management and decision-making A broad range of data should be collected and reported on a frequent and regular basis and used by program managers at all levels to analyze program constraints and manage supply and demand [34]. Examples of such data include the performance of a site (i.e., the number of VMMCs performed) against its functional capacity and projected demand; the demand-creation channels that bring individuals to specific VMMC sites; daily outputs of community members engaged to generate demand; and information on seasonal fluctuations in demand [35]. We recommend that systems and tools be developed to empower and enable managers to use data for day-to-day decision-making and to adjust services in real time. Useful lessons may be learned from other programs (e.g., the Avahan India HIV prevention program), including the use of micro-planning [36]. There is a related need for continual analysis of cost drivers to see where efficiency gains are possible [24]. However, cost analysis should look at the overall program—not just the cost of individual procedures—and should include management, the cost of demand-creation activities, and the opportunity cost of underutilized services sites. Strengthen government capacity to manage and coordinate programs We recommend exploring ways to support the program management capacity of national and subnational governments to coordinate multiple donors and implementers [37], manage competition for limited human resources and health infrastructure, and avoid duplication of efforts. Governments must also lead in strategic planning, including target-setting, geographic prioritization, quality assurance, and monitoring and evaluation. Related to this is the need to support government capacity for streamlined data collection using tracking systems that are standardized across implementers. Strategize for the sustainability phase of the program It is important to begin strategizing for the sustainability phase that should follow the present “catch-up” activities. It will take time to determine the best approach to sustaining high MC prevalence in each country, develop global and national frameworks, secure resources, and implement long-term programs. Since the cohorts prioritized in the sustainability phase will likely be some combination of uncircumcised boys (aged 10−14 years) and infants (aged 0−60 days), it will also be important to explore how best to reach young adolescents and parents of infants, taking into account impact, cost, the feasibility of scale-up, cultural acceptability, and other factors. Keep strategy dynamic, informed by a strong monitoring, evaluation, and learning platform Our final recommendation is that ministries of health, donors, program planners, and implementers strive to maintain a dynamic strategy and evidence-based programs that are agile and able to correct their course when necessary. This is crucial because of the constantly developing understanding of the complexities and challenges of managing VMMC supply and demand, dealing with new technologies, managing costs, and improving efficiency and quality. For this reason too, investment in disseminating and incorporating lessons learned, informed by monitoring and evaluation data, should also be prioritized (Box 3). Box 3. What Needs to Be Done to Accelerate Scale-up and Impact of the VMMC Program? Continue advocating for prioritization and funding for VMMC. Increase program efficiency by identifying and prioritizing those most at risk of acquiring HIV. Focus on program efficiency and quality at all levels, and on matching supply with demand. Explore the role that technologies, especially devices, can play in accelerating scale-up. Rethink demand creation through market segmentation and insights from other disciplines. Gather and use standardized, high-quality data for program management and decision-making. Strengthen government capacity to manage and coordinate programs. Strategize for the sustainability phase of the program. Keep strategy dynamic, informed by a strong monitoring, evaluation, and learning platform. Conclusion Large-scale implementation of VMMC has the potential to significantly reduce the incidence of HIV infection among men having heterosexual sex. In the 14 priority countries of Eastern and Southern Africa, the prospective gains through lives saved, suffering averted, and health care costs avoided make VMMC programs a crucial intervention in the struggle against HIV and AIDS. This realization is reflected in the considerable progress already made in scaling up VMMC programs; but resource and capacity constraints pose a serious challenge to the ability of the priority countries to reach the goal set out in the JSAF. This challenge, readily acknowledged by the countries themselves, is also reflected in a growing body of research that examines the complexity of designing, implementing, scaling up, and evaluating VMMC programs. We believe that many of these challenges can be addressed through systematic, evidence-based management of the programs and a dynamic culture of learning. The papers in this collection add further to our understanding of issues of cost, demand creation, efficiency, and service quality. They represent a significant contribution to our knowledge and help point the way toward the achievement of the VMMC program's ambitious goals.
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              Identifying and Addressing Barriers to Uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision in Nyanza, Kenya among Men 18–35: A Qualitative Study

              Background Uptake of VMMC among adult men has been lower than desired in Nyanza, Kenya. Previous research has identified several barriers to uptake but qualitative exploration of barriers is limited and evidence-informed interventions have not been fully developed. This study was conducted in 2012 to 1) increase understanding of barriers to VMMC and 2) to inform VMMC rollout through the identification of evidence-informed interventions among adult men at high risk of HIV in Nyanza Province, Kenya. Methods Focus groups (n = 8) and interviews were conducted with circumcised (n = 8) and uncircumcised men (n = 14) from the two districts in Nyanza, Kenya. Additional interviews were conducted with female partners (n = 20), health providers (n = 12), community leaders (n = 12) and employers (n = 12). Interview and focus group guides included questions about individual, interpersonal and societal barriers to VMMC uptake and ways to overcome them. Inductive thematic coding and analysis were conducted through a standard iterative process. Results Two primary concerns with VMMC emerged 1) financial issues including missing work, losing income during the procedure and healing and family survival during the recovery period and 2) fear of pain during and after the procedure. Key interventions to address financial concerns included: a food or cash transfer, education on saving and employer-based benefits. Interventions to address concerns about pain included refining the content of demand creation and counseling messages about pain and improving the ways these messages are delivered. Conclusions Men need accurate and detailed information on what to expect during and after VMMC regarding both pain and time away from work. This information should be incorporated into demand creation activities for men considering circumcision. Media content should frankly and correctly address these concerns. Study findings support scale up and/or further improvement of these ongoing educational programs and specifically targeting the demand creation period.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
                J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr
                qai
                Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (1999)
                JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
                1525-4135
                1944-7884
                1 October 2016
                06 October 2016
                : 72
                : Suppl 4
                : S257-S261
                Affiliations
                [* ]Surgo Foundation, Washington, DC;
                []Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA;
                []Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA;
                [§ ]Jhpiego, Washington, DC;
                []Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, WA;
                []FHI 360, Washington, DC;
                [# ]International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie), Washington, DC; and
                [** ]Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA.
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Sema K. Sgaier, MA, MSc, PhD, Surgo Foundation, 641 S Street, NW, 3rd Floor, Washington, DC 20001 (e-mail: semasgaier@ 123456surgofoundation.org ).
                Article
                QAIV17193 00001
                10.1097/QAI.0000000000001155
                5054969
                27749597
                7f921563-dfee-4d7b-a3a6-d8882bbc89dc
                Copyright © 2016 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CCBY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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                hiv,africa,voluntary medical male circumcision,demand generation,impact evaluation,financial compensation,vmmc

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