Our results show that the impact of combined interventions is significantly larger than the summation of individual intervention impacts (super-additive property).
- The combined strategy of universal access to treatment and HIV education scale-up decreases the incidence rate by 74% over the course of 15 years,
- whereas universal access to treatment and HIV education scale up will separately decrease that by 43% and 8%, respectively.
Combination HIV prevention could be notably effective in transforming HIV epidemic to a low-level endemicity. Our results suggest that in designing effective combination prevention in sub-Saharan Africa, priorities should be given to achieving universal access to treatment as quickly as possible and improving compliance to condom use.
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By: Khademi A1, Anand S, Potts D.
- 1From the Department of Industrial Engineering, Clemson University, Clemson (AK, SA); and Anmed Health Medical Center, Anderson, South Carolina, USA (DP).
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