Research questions: What effect does provision of food vouchers have on uptake of voluntary medical male circumcision? What is the amount of food voucher that should be given? Hypothesis: The percentage of men who are compensated for costs of travel to and lost wages due to VMMC and who undergo VMMC will be higher than the percentage of men who are compensated for lost wages or travel and undergo VMMC, and both of these percentages will be higher than the percentage of men who are not compensated for travel or lost wage costs but undergo VMMC.
Purpose: Implement a randomized trial to test whether offering compensation to older men conditional on their coming for medical male circumcision can increase uptake of circumcision services. Participants: 1,500 uncircumcised men of ages 25-49 in Nyando District, 21 men who chose to be circumcised and 21 who did not get circumcised, 10 female partners of men who became circumcised and 10 female partners of men who did not will be interviewed Procedures (methods): To increase uptake of male circumcision, investigators will offer conditional economic compensation for male circumcision. Randomly selected study participants will be given the opportunity, conditional on undergoing male circumcision, to obtain food vouchers that are intended to offset the cost of accessing the VMMC services and the potential lost work the day of the procedure and in the 2 days following the procedure. The food vouchers will be given after study participants choose to uptake VMMC services at any of the static or outreach sites operated by Impact Research and Development Organization (IRDO). Participants will be randomized to one of three intervention groups or to a control group. Participants in the intervention groups will have the opportunity to receive a food voucher valued at one of three amounts (in KES, Kenyan Shillings) if they choose to get circumcised. Participants in the control group will receive a soda but no food voucher if they choose to get circumcised. The amounts for the intervention groups were selected based on the approximate value of 3 days of work and average transportation costs within the district. The amounts were also chosen so that they are not so large as to be perceived as coercive. Investigators selected food vouchers instead of cash or mobile phone credit because the vouchers were deemed to be more acceptable given the sensitive nature of the intervention and men's concern with feeding their families; it was also considered more logistically feasible to offer vouchers at the health facilities rather than cash. Additional focus group discussions will be held to verify that this form and amount of compensation is acceptable and desirable in study communities and if necessary, the intervention can be changed based on these results. The food vouchers will be valid at dukas (shops) located within the district. At the beginning of the study, these shops will be visited and informed about ways to receive cash for the vouchers at the central IRDO office in Nyando District. IRDO has previously explored the feasibility of implementing the voucher scheme and found that it can be implemented in the study areas. Three months after enrollment of study participants, investigators will conduct qualitative research in which there will be in-depth interviews with a small sample of men who did and did not come for circumcision and with their partners. Three topics will be examined in the qualitative interview: men's decision-making, logistics of the intervention, and women's perceptions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1,504
Consistent with standard of care, participants in this group will be offered a refreshment during their office visit.
Impact Research & Development Organization
Kisumu, Nyanza, Kenya
percentage who undergo voluntary medical male circumcision
Time frame: 14 weeks
Qualitative Outcome Measure #1: men's decision-making around circumcision, including how the food voucher affected their decision and communications with their female partners surrounding circumcision.
men's concerns with circumcision (i.e., what man had heard about circumcision prior to enrollment; what man had thought about getting circumcised prior to enrollment; greatest concern with getting circumcised prior to enrollment; degree of financial barrier prior to enrollment), experience with how food voucher was explained (i.e., what man was told about voucher amount, what man was told about reason for voucher, what man was told about how it could be redeemed, whether anything was unclear, whether questions were answered satisfactorily), what was discussed with a female partner (i.e., whether circumcision had ever been discussed; her opinion of it; whether the study and food voucher were discussed and what was discussed; her opinion of the study and food voucher; her opinion of whether man should get circumcision; whether partner's opinions influenced man's decision about whether to go for circumcision)
Time frame: 14 weeks
Qualitative Outcome Measure #2: impact of food voucher intervention on man
the effect of the food voucher on the man (i.e., whether it was volunteered as the biggest reason for deciding to get circumcised; whether it had changed his mind about getting circumcised; whether the value of the food voucher made it easier or more difficult to decide about getting circumcised)
Time frame: 14 weeks
Qualitative Outcome Measure #3: impact of intervention logistics on man
use of food voucher (i.e., whether redeeming it with 30 days was a constraint; whether there were any problems with redeeming it) and transportation \& time away from work (i.e., distance between residence and nearest circumcision clinic; transportation to clinic and its total cost, number of days missed from work and lost wages because of missed work; whether the food voucher offset the costs of transportation and lost wages).
Time frame: 14 weeks
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