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Travel time to health-care facilities, mode of transportation, and HIV elimination in Malawi: a geospatial modelling analysis

Laurence Palk, Justin T Okano, Luckson Dullie, Sally Blower

2020The Lancet Global Health79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: UNAIDS has prioritised Malawi and 21 other countries in sub-Saharan Africa for fast-tracking the end of their HIV epidemics. UNAIDS' elimination strategy requires achieving a treatment coverage of 90% by 2030. However, many individuals in the prioritised countries have to travel long distances to access HIV treatment and few have access to motorised transportation. Using data-based geospatial modelling, we investigated whether these two factors are barriers to achieving HIV elimination in Malawi and assessed the effect of increasing bicycle availability on expanding treatment coverage. METHODS: , and an impedance map. We quantified impedance using data on road and river networks, land cover, and topography. We estimated travel times for the existing coverage of 70%, and the time that HIV-infected individuals would need to spend travelling in order to achieve a coverage of 90%, whether driving, bicycling, or walking. FINDINGS: We identified a quantitative relationship between the maximum achievable coverage of treatment and the minimum travel time to the nearest health-care facility. At 70% coverage, health-care facilities can be reached within approximately 45 min if driving, 65 min if bicycling, and 85 min if walking. Increasing coverage above 70% will become progressively more difficult. To reach 90% coverage, many HIV-infected individuals (who have yet to initiate treatment) will need to travel for almost twice as long as those already on treatment. Bicycling, rather than walking, in rural areas would substantially increase the maximum achievable coverage. INTERPRETATION: The long travel times needed to reach health-care facilities coupled with little motorised transportation in rural areas are substantial barriers to reaching 90% coverage in Malawi. Increased bicycle availability could help eliminate HIV. FUNDING: US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Topics & Concepts

Geospatial analysisEnvironmental healthHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Health geographyGeographyHealth facilityTravel timeTransport engineeringMedicineBusinessComputer sciencePublic healthPopulationHealth policyCartographyEngineeringHealth servicesNursingFamily medicineInternational healthHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsUrban Transport and AccessibilityCOVID-19 epidemiological studies