» Articles » PMID: 33093330

Cost-Effectiveness of HRSA's Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program?

Overview
Date 2020 Oct 23
PMID 33093330
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: With an annual budget of more than $2 billion, the Health Resources and Services Administration's Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (RWHAP) is the third largest source of public funding for HIV care and treatment in the United States, yet little analysis has been done to quantify the long-term public health and economic impacts of the federal program.

Methods: Using an agent-based, stochastic model, we estimated health care costs and outcomes over a 50-year period in the presence of the RWHAP relative to those expected to prevail if the comprehensive and integrated system of medical and support services funded by the RWHAP were not available. We made a conservative assumption that, in the absence of the RWHAP, only uninsured clients would lose access to these medical and support services.

Results: The model predicts that the proportion of people with HIV who are virally suppressed would be 25.2 percentage points higher in the presence of the RWHAP (82.6 percent versus 57.4 percent without the RWHAP). The number of new HIV infections would be 18 percent (190,197) lower, the number of deaths among people with HIV would be 31 percent (267,886) lower, the number of quality-adjusted life years would be 2.7 percent (5.6 million) higher, and the cumulative health care costs would be 25 percent ($165 billion) higher in the presence of the RWHAP relative to the counterfactual. Based on these results, the RWHAP has an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $29,573 per quality-adjusted life year gained compared with the non-RWHAP scenario. Sensitivity analysis indicates that the probability of transmitting HIV via male-to-male sexual contact and the cost of antiretroviral medications have the largest effect on the cost-effectiveness of the program.

Conclusions: The RWHAP would be considered very cost-effective when using standard guidelines of less than the per capita gross domestic product of the United States. The results suggest that the RWHAP plays a critical and cost-effective role in the United States' public health response to the HIV epidemic.

Citing Articles

Complexity and Variation in Infectious Disease Birth Cohorts: Findings from HIV+ Medicare and Medicaid Beneficiaries, 1999-2020.

Williams N Entropy (Basel). 2024; 26(11).

PMID: 39593914 PMC: 11592912. DOI: 10.3390/e26110970.


The impact of Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act on HIV care continuum outcomes across the United States.

Rebeiro P, Thome J, Gange S, Althoff K, Berry S, Horberg M Health Aff Sch. 2024; 2(10):qxae128.

PMID: 39445109 PMC: 11498052. DOI: 10.1093/haschl/qxae128.


Cost Analysis of Implementing a 12-Month Recertification Criterion for Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program's AIDS Drug Assistance Program in Washington State.

Erly S, Dombrowski J, Khosropour C, Reuer J, Boersema K, Sharma M Public Health Rep. 2024; 139(5):573-581.

PMID: 38327231 PMC: 11344975. DOI: 10.1177/00333549241227118.


Assessing the reliability of the CD4 depletion model in the presence of Ending the HIV Epidemic initiatives.

Tang M, Goyal R, Anderson C, Mehta S, Little S AIDS. 2023; 37(10):1617-1624.

PMID: 37260256 PMC: 10524824. DOI: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000003614.


AIDS Drug Assistance Program disenrollment is associated with loss of viral suppression beyond differences in homelessness, mental health, and substance use disorders: An evaluation in Washington state 2017-2019.

Erly S, Khosropour C, Hajat A, Sharma M, Reuer J, Dombrowski J PLoS One. 2023; 18(5):e0285326.

PMID: 37141285 PMC: 10159195. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0285326.