Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives

This report presents an impact evaluation assessing the effect of incentives on improving the uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) in two districts in Malawi. The cluster randomised control trial was led by the National AIDS Commiss...

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Main Author: World Bank
Other Authors: Longosz, Andrew
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/161401524596207520/Impact-evaluation-on-improving-voluntary-medical-male-circumcision-demand-in-Malawi-through-the-use-of-incentives-impact-evaluation-results
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29734
id okr-10986-29734
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-297342021-06-14T10:13:26Z Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives World Bank Longosz, Andrew Chikwava, Fadzai Friedman, Jed Gorgens, Marelize de Marcellus, Molly Rodriguez-Garcia, Rosalia Hawkin, Theo CIRCUMCISION INCENTIVE SCHEME IMPACT EVALUATION SOCIAL NETWORKS HEALTH SERVICES TARGETING CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS This report presents an impact evaluation assessing the effect of incentives on improving the uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) in two districts in Malawi. The cluster randomised control trial was led by the National AIDS Commission of Malawi and implemented from December 2015 to April 2016. The primary research question was whether incentives can increase VMMC uptake among in-school and out-of-school males aged 10-34. Collective incentives (e.g. whiteboards, football equipment) to schools and Mothers’ Groups, as well as individual incentives in the form of vouchers for VMMC were tested. The evaluation found that incentives in the form of vouchers for VMMC work. The vouchers had a significant positive impact on VMMC demand by increasing the odds of getting circumcised by over seven times. Secondary distribution by voucher recipients showed potential to informally increase distribution networks without increasing costs. There was some evidence of spill-over to relatives: nearly a third of participants in both study districts who had been given vouchers reported that they gave vouchers to relatives. Using the participants’ own social networks had the result of expanding the reach of the intervention without additional distribution costs. The evaluation also found that community-involvement, especially in the form of Mothers’ Groups, was essential to motivate young men to seek VMMC. The report discusses the policy implications of this positive finding of incentives. 2018-04-26T20:07:48Z 2018-04-26T20:07:48Z 2017-03 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/161401524596207520/Impact-evaluation-on-improving-voluntary-medical-male-circumcision-demand-in-Malawi-through-the-use-of-incentives-impact-evaluation-results http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29734 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Health Study Economic & Sector Work Africa Malawi
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CIRCUMCISION
INCENTIVE SCHEME
IMPACT EVALUATION
SOCIAL NETWORKS
HEALTH SERVICES
TARGETING
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
spellingShingle CIRCUMCISION
INCENTIVE SCHEME
IMPACT EVALUATION
SOCIAL NETWORKS
HEALTH SERVICES
TARGETING
CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS
World Bank
Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives
geographic_facet Africa
Malawi
description This report presents an impact evaluation assessing the effect of incentives on improving the uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) in two districts in Malawi. The cluster randomised control trial was led by the National AIDS Commission of Malawi and implemented from December 2015 to April 2016. The primary research question was whether incentives can increase VMMC uptake among in-school and out-of-school males aged 10-34. Collective incentives (e.g. whiteboards, football equipment) to schools and Mothers’ Groups, as well as individual incentives in the form of vouchers for VMMC were tested. The evaluation found that incentives in the form of vouchers for VMMC work. The vouchers had a significant positive impact on VMMC demand by increasing the odds of getting circumcised by over seven times. Secondary distribution by voucher recipients showed potential to informally increase distribution networks without increasing costs. There was some evidence of spill-over to relatives: nearly a third of participants in both study districts who had been given vouchers reported that they gave vouchers to relatives. Using the participants’ own social networks had the result of expanding the reach of the intervention without additional distribution costs. The evaluation also found that community-involvement, especially in the form of Mothers’ Groups, was essential to motivate young men to seek VMMC. The report discusses the policy implications of this positive finding of incentives.
author2 Longosz, Andrew
author_facet Longosz, Andrew
World Bank
format Report
author World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives
title_short Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives
title_full Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives
title_fullStr Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives
title_full_unstemmed Impact Evaluation on Improving Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Demand in Malawi through the Use of Incentives
title_sort impact evaluation on improving voluntary medical male circumcision demand in malawi through the use of incentives
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/161401524596207520/Impact-evaluation-on-improving-voluntary-medical-male-circumcision-demand-in-Malawi-through-the-use-of-incentives-impact-evaluation-results
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29734
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