HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences
The three policies analyzed in this document include a minimalist policy in which the government strengthens private sector delivery, an intermediate policy of providing treatment for mothers who have AIDS and their spouses, and a generous policy o...
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okr-10986-149162021-04-23T14:03:12Z HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences Over, Mead Heywood, Peter Gold, Julian Gupta, Indrani Hira, Subhash Marseille, Elliot ADULTS ADVERSE EFFECTS AIDS EPIDEMIC AIDSRELATED COMPLEX BREASTFEEDING BURDEN OF DISEASE CANCER CANCERS CITIES CLINICS COMMODITIES COMMUNITY HEALTH CONDOMS DIAGNOSIS ECONOMISTS EPIDEMIOLOGISTS EPIDEMIOLOGY EXERCISES FEMALES HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH EXPENDITURES HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH POLICY HEALTH SERVICES HEPATITIS HIV HIV ANTIBODIES HIV INFECTION HIV INFECTIONS HIV TRANSMISSION HIV/ AIDS HIVINFECTED PEOPLE HIVPOSITIVE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT ILLNESSES IMMUNE SYSTEM INFECTION INFECTIONS INFECTIOUS DISEASES INTERVENTION LIFE EXPECTANCY LONGEVITY MALNUTRITION MEDICAL CARE MORTALITY MOTHERS NEGATIVE EFFECTS OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS PATIENTS PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES PHYSICIANS POLICY RESEARCH POPULATION INDICATORS PREGNANT WOMEN PREVALENCE PRIVATE SECTOR PROPHYLAXIS PSYCHOSOCIAL PROBLEMS PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH SPECIALISTS PUBLIC HOSPITALS PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY OF LIFE RELAXATION REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RISK GROUPS SCREENING SERVICE DELIVERY SEX SEX WORKERS SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS SYMPTOMS THERAPY URBAN AREAS VIRUSES The three policies analyzed in this document include a minimalist policy in which the government strengthens private sector delivery, an intermediate policy of providing treatment for mothers who have AIDS and their spouses, and a generous policy of providing treatment to the poorest 40 percent of all AIDS patients. In January 2004 the Indian government adopted an AIDS financing policy which contains elements of all three of the hypothetical policies analyzed in this book. This study's projections of the total financial cost of the program and of the cost-effectiveness of the three options can help the government and its partners to plan the scale-up of the existing treatment program, to optimize the mix of components in order to improve its cost-effectiveness and to design monitoring and evaluation measures which provide feedback on program performance. 2013-08-08T14:52:34Z 2013-08-08T14:52:34Z 2004 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/06/5138846/hivaids-treatment-prevention-india-modeling-cost-consequences 0-8213-5657-7 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14916 English en_US Health, Nutrition, and Population; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication South Asia India |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ADULTS ADVERSE EFFECTS AIDS EPIDEMIC AIDSRELATED COMPLEX BREASTFEEDING BURDEN OF DISEASE CANCER CANCERS CITIES CLINICS COMMODITIES COMMUNITY HEALTH CONDOMS DIAGNOSIS ECONOMISTS EPIDEMIOLOGISTS EPIDEMIOLOGY EXERCISES FEMALES HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH EXPENDITURES HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH POLICY HEALTH SERVICES HEPATITIS HIV HIV ANTIBODIES HIV INFECTION HIV INFECTIONS HIV TRANSMISSION HIV/ AIDS HIVINFECTED PEOPLE HIVPOSITIVE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT ILLNESSES IMMUNE SYSTEM INFECTION INFECTIONS INFECTIOUS DISEASES INTERVENTION LIFE EXPECTANCY LONGEVITY MALNUTRITION MEDICAL CARE MORTALITY MOTHERS NEGATIVE EFFECTS OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS PATIENTS PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES PHYSICIANS POLICY RESEARCH POPULATION INDICATORS PREGNANT WOMEN PREVALENCE PRIVATE SECTOR PROPHYLAXIS PSYCHOSOCIAL PROBLEMS PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH SPECIALISTS PUBLIC HOSPITALS PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY OF LIFE RELAXATION REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RISK GROUPS SCREENING SERVICE DELIVERY SEX SEX WORKERS SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS SYMPTOMS THERAPY URBAN AREAS VIRUSES |
spellingShingle |
ADULTS ADVERSE EFFECTS AIDS EPIDEMIC AIDSRELATED COMPLEX BREASTFEEDING BURDEN OF DISEASE CANCER CANCERS CITIES CLINICS COMMODITIES COMMUNITY HEALTH CONDOMS DIAGNOSIS ECONOMISTS EPIDEMIOLOGISTS EPIDEMIOLOGY EXERCISES FEMALES HEALTH CARE HEALTH CARE COSTS HEALTH EXPENDITURES HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH POLICY HEALTH SERVICES HEPATITIS HIV HIV ANTIBODIES HIV INFECTION HIV INFECTIONS HIV TRANSMISSION HIV/ AIDS HIVINFECTED PEOPLE HIVPOSITIVE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT ILLNESSES IMMUNE SYSTEM INFECTION INFECTIONS INFECTIOUS DISEASES INTERVENTION LIFE EXPECTANCY LONGEVITY MALNUTRITION MEDICAL CARE MORTALITY MOTHERS NEGATIVE EFFECTS OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS PATIENTS PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES PHYSICIANS POLICY RESEARCH POPULATION INDICATORS PREGNANT WOMEN PREVALENCE PRIVATE SECTOR PROPHYLAXIS PSYCHOSOCIAL PROBLEMS PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH SPECIALISTS PUBLIC HOSPITALS PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY OF LIFE RELAXATION REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RISK GROUPS SCREENING SERVICE DELIVERY SEX SEX WORKERS SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS SYMPTOMS THERAPY URBAN AREAS VIRUSES Over, Mead Heywood, Peter Gold, Julian Gupta, Indrani Hira, Subhash Marseille, Elliot HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences |
geographic_facet |
South Asia India |
relation |
Health, Nutrition, and Population; |
description |
The three policies analyzed in this
document include a minimalist policy in which the government
strengthens private sector delivery, an intermediate policy
of providing treatment for mothers who have AIDS and their
spouses, and a generous policy of providing treatment to the
poorest 40 percent of all AIDS patients. In January 2004 the
Indian government adopted an AIDS financing policy which
contains elements of all three of the hypothetical policies
analyzed in this book. This study's projections of the
total financial cost of the program and of the
cost-effectiveness of the three options can help the
government and its partners to plan the scale-up of the
existing treatment program, to optimize the mix of
components in order to improve its cost-effectiveness and to
design monitoring and evaluation measures which provide
feedback on program performance. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Publication |
author |
Over, Mead Heywood, Peter Gold, Julian Gupta, Indrani Hira, Subhash Marseille, Elliot |
author_facet |
Over, Mead Heywood, Peter Gold, Julian Gupta, Indrani Hira, Subhash Marseille, Elliot |
author_sort |
Over, Mead |
title |
HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences |
title_short |
HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences |
title_full |
HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences |
title_fullStr |
HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences |
title_full_unstemmed |
HIV/AIDS Treatment and Prevention in India : Modeling the Cost and Consequences |
title_sort |
hiv/aids treatment and prevention in india : modeling the cost and consequences |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/06/5138846/hivaids-treatment-prevention-india-modeling-cost-consequences http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14916 |
_version_ |
1764426135292084224 |