|
HIV prevention strategy to benefit sufferers
Reported
August 17, 2010
Increasing highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) treatment for people
with HIV/AIDS will provide significant cost savings over a relatively short
period of time, according to a formal economic analysis.
Led by researchers at the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS (BC-CfE) at
Providence Health Care and the University of British Columbia (UBC), the
analysis of HAART coverage in British Columbia, is the first comprehensive
economic evaluation of the net benefit of HAART in the province.
HAART lowers viral load, stopping HIV from progressing to AIDS in
individuals and helping to prevent HIV transmission.
The study's key finding shows that while expanding HAART use is
cost-effective for individual patients, the benefits become exponentially
greater when HAART's ability to prevent HIV transmission is considered.
The economic analysis demonstrated that increasing HAART treatment coverage
from the current estimated 50 per cent to 75 per cent of all clinically
eligible British Columbians (HIV-infected individuals with CD4 cell counts
below 350 cells/ ul) would deliver a net benefit of 900 million US Dollars
over 30 years.
"The study findings make the point that expansion of HAART is not just a
medical or ethical imperative, it is a very smart financial investment in
terms of its potential to improve public health," said Dr. Julio Montaner,
director of the BC-CfE, president of the IAS, and one of the authors of the
study.
"HIV continues to be a global health concern and the lifetime costs of
treating individuals with HIV are substantial. Therefore, HAART's potential
to prevent new HIV infections is an important element of the overall
strategy to minimize the economic burden on the health care system of
treating HIV," he added.
Within B.C., the sub-populations most affected by HIV are hard-to-reach,
marginalized groups such as sex trade workers, injection drug users and men
who have sex with men.
Prevention of new infections among these HIV-vulnerable groups must be a
priority in order to meaningfully curb the growth of the epidemic.
In this context, the study findings lend further credence to the BC-CfE-pioneered
Seek and Treat strategy.
The Seek and Treat program will improve access to HIV/AIDS treatment and
care among hard-to-reach populations.
The study is published in AIDS, the official journal of the International
AIDS Society (IAS).
|