Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.

BACKGROUND: This paper proposes an approach to estimating the costs of demand creation for voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) scale-up in 13 countries of eastern and southern Africa. It addresses two key questions: (1) what are the elements of a standardized package for demand creation? And...

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Main Authors: Jane T Bertrand, Emmanuel Njeuhmeli, Steven Forsythe, Sarah K Mattison, Hally Mahler, Catherine A Hankins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3226625?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-899ab880e48b45d1b97b0981088b5b8b2020-11-24T21:35:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01611e2756210.1371/journal.pone.0027562Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.Jane T BertrandEmmanuel NjeuhmeliSteven ForsytheSarah K MattisonHally MahlerCatherine A HankinsBACKGROUND: This paper proposes an approach to estimating the costs of demand creation for voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) scale-up in 13 countries of eastern and southern Africa. It addresses two key questions: (1) what are the elements of a standardized package for demand creation? And (2) what challenges exist and must be taken into account in estimating the costs of demand creation? METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted a key informant study on VMMC demand creation using purposive sampling to recruit seven people who provide technical assistance to government programs and manage budgets for VMMC demand creation. Key informants provided their views on the important elements of VMMC demand creation and the most effective funding allocations across different types of communication approaches (e.g., mass media, small media, outreach/mobilization). The key finding was the wide range of views, suggesting that a standard package of core demand creation elements would not be universally applicable. This underscored the importance of tailoring demand creation strategies and estimates to specific country contexts before estimating costs. The key informant interviews, supplemented by the researchers' field experience, identified these issues to be addressed in future costing exercises: variations in the cost of VMMC demand creation activities by country and program, decisions about the quality and comprehensiveness of programming, and lack of data on critical elements needed to "trigger the decision" among eligible men. CONCLUSIONS: Based on this study's findings, we propose a seven-step methodological approach to estimate the cost of VMMC scale-up in a priority country, based on our key assumptions. However, further work is needed to better understand core components of a demand creation package and how to cost them. Notwithstanding the methodological challenges, estimating the cost of demand creation remains an essential element in deriving estimates of the total costs for VMMC scale-up in eastern and southern Africa.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3226625?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jane T Bertrand
Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
Steven Forsythe
Sarah K Mattison
Hally Mahler
Catherine A Hankins
spellingShingle Jane T Bertrand
Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
Steven Forsythe
Sarah K Mattison
Hally Mahler
Catherine A Hankins
Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jane T Bertrand
Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
Steven Forsythe
Sarah K Mattison
Hally Mahler
Catherine A Hankins
author_sort Jane T Bertrand
title Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.
title_short Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.
title_full Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.
title_fullStr Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.
title_full_unstemmed Voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern Africa.
title_sort voluntary medical male circumcision: a qualitative study exploring the challenges of costing demand creation in eastern and southern africa.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description BACKGROUND: This paper proposes an approach to estimating the costs of demand creation for voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) scale-up in 13 countries of eastern and southern Africa. It addresses two key questions: (1) what are the elements of a standardized package for demand creation? And (2) what challenges exist and must be taken into account in estimating the costs of demand creation? METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted a key informant study on VMMC demand creation using purposive sampling to recruit seven people who provide technical assistance to government programs and manage budgets for VMMC demand creation. Key informants provided their views on the important elements of VMMC demand creation and the most effective funding allocations across different types of communication approaches (e.g., mass media, small media, outreach/mobilization). The key finding was the wide range of views, suggesting that a standard package of core demand creation elements would not be universally applicable. This underscored the importance of tailoring demand creation strategies and estimates to specific country contexts before estimating costs. The key informant interviews, supplemented by the researchers' field experience, identified these issues to be addressed in future costing exercises: variations in the cost of VMMC demand creation activities by country and program, decisions about the quality and comprehensiveness of programming, and lack of data on critical elements needed to "trigger the decision" among eligible men. CONCLUSIONS: Based on this study's findings, we propose a seven-step methodological approach to estimate the cost of VMMC scale-up in a priority country, based on our key assumptions. However, further work is needed to better understand core components of a demand creation package and how to cost them. Notwithstanding the methodological challenges, estimating the cost of demand creation remains an essential element in deriving estimates of the total costs for VMMC scale-up in eastern and southern Africa.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3226625?pdf=render
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