Trials / Not Yet Recruiting
Not Yet RecruitingNCT06820697
Private-sector Access to Testing for Health Sustainability
Expanding Access to HIV Self-test Kits: Sustaining Private Sector Channels That Enable Access to Preventive Health Services
- Status
- Not Yet Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 200 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- University of California, San Francisco · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
New and innovative strategies are urgently needed to increase the uptake of HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health services among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in sub-Saharan Africa. To ensure the real-world sustainability of free distribution of HIV self-test kits to AGYW by private drug shops and pharmacies, investigators will rigorously test supply-side subsidy structures for shopkeepers' provision of HIV-self test kits to AGYW combined with prosocial motivational supports. The combination of non-monetary and monetary support structures aims to emulate real-world health financing models for public-private partnerships and ultimately aims to improve equity in access to critical prevention services for AGYW at scale.
Detailed description
This is an implementation-effectiveness trial that tests program adoption, implementation, and maintenance of free HIV self-test kit (HIVST) distribution to adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) financed by profits from HIVST kit sales to non-AGYW customers. To initiate adoption, the study will offer pharmacy and drug shopkeepers the opportunity to procure subsidized HIVST to simultaneously distribute to AGYW for free (reimbursed by the study mimicking government-supported provision) and sell to non-AGYW customers for profit, gradually phasing out procurement subsidies over 36 months to test maintenance of the segmented pricing model for real-world sustainability (Aim 1). Investigators will implement non-monetary motivation boosters to sustain shopkeeper engagement over the study period and use mixed-methods to understand shopkeepers' experiences and necessary conditions for program maintenance and provider behavior change (Aim 2), which will inform the co-design of a progressive scale-up plan to achieve national coverage with Tanzanian AGYW, public, and private partnership stakeholders (Aim 3). At the study's conclusion, investigators will have a comprehensive understanding of the support structures shops need to sustain HIVST kit provision for AGYW. Importantly, the study will contribute to generalizable learning about the structures required for commercially sustainable public-private partnerships for high-impact public health interventions.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Low HIVST kit subsidy | The two study groups are the "high" and "low" subsidy groups. The high subsidy group will start off with a 90% subsidy while the low subsidy group will start off with a 50% subsidy. Both study groups will experience decreasing subsidies at each phase of the study. |
| BEHAVIORAL | High HIVST kit subsidy | The two study groups are the "high" and "low" subsidy groups. The high subsidy group will start off with a 90% subsidy while the low subsidy group will start off with a 50% subsidy. Both study groups will experience decreasing subsidies at each phase of the study. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2026-07-01
- Primary completion
- 2029-04-30
- Completion
- 2029-04-30
- First posted
- 2025-02-11
- Last updated
- 2026-04-17
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Tanzania
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06820697. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.