Vernon John A, Payette Michael, Chatterjee Abhishek
Gillings School of Global Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7411, USA.
Soc Work Public Health. 2009 Sep-Oct;24(5):414-45. doi: 10.1080/19371910903038165.
In this article, the authors review current literature to analyze the cost-effectiveness of seven vaccines now available for adolescents and one that is in development. An analysis is also performed regarding the cutoff price that deems a vaccine "cost-effective." Often, $50,000 is the limit below which a drug is viewed as cost-effective. Our article contends that $160,000 could be a new limit below which the cost-effectiveness of a vaccine is better reflected. Based on standard economic valuations of life years in the United States and the preponderance of evidence from the cost-effectiveness literature, there is a compelling case for expanding adolescent vaccine programs, guidelines, and educational initiatives in the United States; there exist considerable economic benefits in excess of costs from policies that may achieve this objective.