PLOS Global Public Health (Jan 2023)

Characterising the HIV self-testing market in Kenya: Awareness and usage, barriers and motivators to uptake, and propensity to pay.

  • Rebecca L West,
  • Lily Freeman,
  • Charlotte Pahe,
  • Harmon Momanyi,
  • Catherine Kidiga,
  • Serah Malaba,
  • Joanna Ciecielag,
  • Mary-Clare Ridge,
  • Emma Goldwin,
  • Heather Awsumb,
  • Sunny Sharma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001776
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
p. e0001776

Abstract

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HIVST has a key role in ensuring countries meet their 95-95-95 goals. For HIVST to be sustainable, we should explore sharing costs with users as well as the overall experience. This research explores why a consumer would use HIVST and willingness to pay for HIVST through surveying 1,021 participants 18-35 living in Nairobi or Kisumu who were not diagnosed as HIV positive and who are not currently taking PrEP for HIV. A majority (89.8%) would pay 100 KSH and 64.7% would pay 300 KSH, at higher prices likelihood of paying dropped sharply. Price reduction or subsidization coupled with interventions to address the identified barriers may increase HIVST uptake. We identified 5 distinct groups based on willingness to pay and drivers/ barriers to HIVST uptake. These were created using dimension reduction, hierarchical clustering, and k-means analysis to group respondents. 79% of participants had ever heard of HIVST, and 24% had ever used HIVST. The 5 groups included active users, unlikely users, and three segments interested in HIVST with different barriers: need for HCP support, need for increased privacy/confidentiality, and fear of positive result/disclosure.