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The Economics and Financing of Harm Reduction David Wilson and Nicole Fraser, Global HIV/AIDS Program, World Bank David Wilson, University of New South.

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Presentation on theme: "The Economics and Financing of Harm Reduction David Wilson and Nicole Fraser, Global HIV/AIDS Program, World Bank David Wilson, University of New South."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Economics and Financing of Harm Reduction David Wilson and Nicole Fraser, Global HIV/AIDS Program, World Bank David Wilson, University of New South Wales, Australia Tuesday 10 June 2013 IHRA 2013

2 Overview  Why worry?  What works and what does it cost?  What’s the coverage?  How much is spent on harm reduction?  How much is needed to scale-up harm reduction?  What’s the cost-effectiveness/return on investment?

3 Why worry?

4 Prevalence of Injecting Drug Use Mathers et al, Lancet (2008)

5 Prevalence of HIV among PWID Mathers et al, Lancet (2008)

6 HIV prevalence among PWID in Eastern and Central Asia Source: Bradley Mathers, Lancet 2008

7 HIV infections in PWID as share of infections in Eastern Europe and Central Asia Source: Own calculation based on data from EuroHIV (2007)

8 HIV prevalence among sex workers in Central Asia

9 Surging HIV epidemic among PWID in Greece

10 HIV, HCV and TB PWID have higher HCV and TB rates 10 million PWID may have HCV - surpassing HIV infection HIV+ PWID 2 to 6-fold higher risk of TB infection TB risk 23-fold higher in prisons Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012

11 What harm reduction interventions work and what do they cost?  Three proven priority interventions  NSP  OST  ART  WHO, UNODC and UNAIDS - three priority interventions plus HCT, condoms, IEC, STI, HCV and TB prevention/treatment

12 Source: L. Degenhardt Lancet July 2010 What we know about NSP

13  HIV prevalence in 99 cities worldwide (MacDonald et al, 2003) 19% per year in cities with NSP 8% in cities without NSP  International evidence shows NSP effective (Wodak, 2008) What we know about NSP

14 Source: L. Degenhardt Lancet July 2010 What we know about OST (versus compulsory detention)

15  Compulsory detention common especially in Asia and Eastern Europe  Detention costly  Minimum cost $1,000 annually in Asia – mainly security  Average OST cost $585 annually  Two evaluations in progress in Malaysia and Vietnam What we know about OST (versus compulsory detention)

16 Effectiveness of community OST versus compulsory detention  Preliminary data from Malaysia  95% relapse after compulsory detention  7% relapse in community OST

17  All RCTs of OST positive (Mattick et al, 2003)  Large observational studies show OST decreases heroin use and criminal activity (Mattcick, 1998)  OST reduces injecting and increases safe injections (Cochrane Syst. Review; Gowing, 2008; Mattick, 2009)  Amsterdam cohort study (Van den Berg, 2007) showed OST and NSP reduced HIV incidence by 66%  Recent meta-analysis (Mcarthur BMJ2012) shows OST reduces HIV incidence by 50% What we know about OST

18 What we know about ART in PWID

19 What we know about combined NSP+OST+ART Modelling evidence: NSP+OST+ART combination: 5-year impact on HIV incidence Source: Degenhardt et al, 2010

20 What are the cost ranges? NSP  NSP costs $23–71 /yr 1, but higher if all costs included  NSP costs vary by region and delivery system (pharmacies, specialist programme sites, vending machines, vehicles or outreach) 1 UNAIDS 2007 resource estimations; Schwartlaender et al 2011. 2 UNSW estimates, based on 10 studies identified in the 6 regions 2

21 What are the cost ranges? OST  OST cost : Methadone 80 mg: $363 - 1,057 / yr; Buprenorphine, low dose: $1,236 – 3,167 /yr 1  Few OST cost studies but consistently far higher than NSP 1 UNAIDS 2007 resource estimations; Schwartlaender et al 2011. 2 UNSW estimates, based on 10 studies identified in the 6 regions 2

22 What are the cost ranges? ART  ART cost: UNAIDS estimate $176 1  Estimated costs by authors $1,000-2,000 per HIV+ PWID 1 UNAIDS 2007 resource estimations; Schwartlaender et al 2011. 2 UNSW estimates, based on 10 studies identified in the 6 regions 2

23 What is the current coverage of NSP, OST and ART in PWID?

24 Harm reduction data challenges Sources: UNGASS country progress reports 2012; Mathers et al., 2010; Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012  Limited population size estimates  Inconsistent service quality data  Surveys miss hidden populations  ATS increasingly used and injected but missed in surveys  Significant but undocumented scale-down of services

25 NSP coverage The Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012  86 countries and territories implement NSPs  3 new NSPs since 2010 – South Africa, Tanzania, Laos-PDR  High coverage limited to Western Europe, Australia and Bangladesh (>200 NS/PWID/year)

26 NSP available as per policy (Black: community and prison, red: community only) Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012

27 Gaps in NSP coverage (1) Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012; (2) based on Mathers et al., 2010  NSP coverage < 20% in all regions - globally, <2 clean needles distributed /PWID /month  Since 2010, NSP provision scaled back in several countries in Asia (Pakistan, Nepal and Cambodia) and Eurasia (Belarus, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Lithuania and Russia)  72 countries with PWID without NSPs

28 Over 14 million PWID (90%) may not access NSP Source: Authors’ literature and estimations, based on Mathers et al., 2010

29 OST coverage Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012  OST in 77 countries worldwide  7 new countries since 2010 (Cambodia, Bangladesh, Tajikistan, Kenya, Tanzania, Macau, Kosovo)  Primarily methadone and buprenorphine but also other formulations - slow-release morphine, codeine, heroin-assisted treatment

30 OST available as per policy (Black: community and prison, red: community only) Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012

31 Gaps in OST coverage  6–12% of PWID access OST  Coverage limited in much of CIS and Asia  OST unavailable in 81 countries with PWID  ATS use increasing – and limited ATS harm response Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012

32 Almost 15 million PWID (92%) may not use OST Source: Authors’ literature and estimates, using Mathers et al., 2010

33 ART coverage in HIV+ PWID Source: Authors literature review and estimates, using Mathers et al. 2010  Large regional discrepancies  Uptake highest in Western Europe (89%) and Australasia (50%)  Elsewhere ART coverage < 5%  Largest gaps in Eastern Europe & Central Asia (1 million) and South, East & South-East Asia (700,000)

34 About 2.5 million HIV+ PWID (85%) may not access ART Source: Authors’ literature and estimates, using Mathers et al. 2010

35 What is the global coverage of harm reduction services? Source: Authors’ literature review and estimates, using Mathers et al. 2010 Few PWID access all three priority interventions Female PWID far lower access than males An estimated 10% access NSP About 14% of HIV+ PWID access ART An estimated 8% access OST

36 How much is spent on harm reduction? Sources: Stimson et al 2010 (three cents report), UNAIDS 2009; UNAIDS Progress report 2012; Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012; Bridge et al 2012  Estimated $160 million in LMIC in 2007 (3 cents per PWID per day): 90% from international donors  Global Fund largest HR funder (estimated $430 million 2002-2009) > 50% to Eastern Europe and Central Asia

37 Global Fund PWID investments by region (US$) Sources: Bridge 2012, summarised in Global State of Harm Reduction, 2012 30% Ukraine 10% Russ Fed 8% Kazakhstan 17% Thailand 15% Viet Nam 14% China

38 How much is needed to scale up priority harm reduction interventions? NSP coverage (%) Needles / PWID /year OST uptake (%) ART uptake of HIV+ PWID (%) Current estimated level1022814 Scenarios: Mid target201002025 High target602004075  Very preliminary resource estimates based on regional estimates of current NSP /OST /ART coverage, population sizes and unit costs  Mid and high target scenarios costed

39 How much needed to scale up priority harm reduction interventions – preliminary estimates

40 Summary: Estimated annual cost of scale- up of NSP, OST and ART for PWIDs Mid target 20% NSP coverage 20% OST coverage 25% ART coverage High target 60% NSP coverage 40% OST coverage 75% ART coverage South, East & South East Asia527M1,49B Latin America & Caribbean625M1,47B Middle East & North Africa26M55M W- Europe, N- America & Australasia17M1,19B Eastern Europe & Central Asia1.04B2,51B Sub-Saharan Africa414M901M Total per year2,65B7,62B 1: Mathers et al, Lancet (2010) 2: Scale-up calculations by UNSW

41 Annual scale-up costs by region and intervention  Costs dominated by Eastern Europe and Central Asia 1: Mathers et al, Lancet (2010) 2: Scale-up calculations by UNSW

42 Cost-effectiveness and relative return on investment ranges by region () number of studies in literature Western Europe, North America & Australasia CE 1 : ROI 2 : $402-$34,278 (9) $1.1-$5.5 (3) Sub-Saharan Africa Eastern Europe & Central Asia The Middle East & North Africa South, East & South East Asia Latin America & The Caribbean CE 1 : ROI 2 : $97-$564 (3) $1.4 (1) CE 1 :$1,456-$2,952 (1) CE 1 : ROI 2 : $71-$2,800 (7) $1.2-$8.0 (4) 1: Cost per HIV infection averted 2: Total future return per $1 invested (3% discount rate)

43 Harm reduction cost-effectiveness  Harm reduction cost-effective in all regions, with costs per HIV infection averted from $100 -$1,000  Harm reduction returns positive, with total future returns per $ from $1.1 – $8.0 (3% discount rate) Also  Unit costs fall as interventions scaled-up  Combined, integrated interventions reduce overheads  Intervention synergies increase effectiveness

44  Australia invested A$243 million in NSP  Prevented estimated 32,050 HIV infections and 96,667 HCV cases  A$1.28 billion saved in direct healthcare costs  Including patient/client costs and productivity gains and losses, net present value of NSPs is $5.85 billion Source: Return on Investment 2, Department of Health and Ageing, Australian Government ROI - A$27 per A$1 invested Australia’s example: Economic benefits of a supportive legal and policy environment

45  Inaction costly  NOT the equivalent of nothing happening  Hard to reverse epidemic once established  Whereas harm reduction is  Effective - in terms of HIV cases averted  Cost-effective - in terms of healthy years gained and costs  Social benefits exceed treatment costs  And benefits the whole population  Substance abuse treatment can benefit more non- drug users than drug users  Global best buy CONCLUSION


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