Global Health Task Force, Freiburg University Medical Center, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Nov 6;13:1048. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-1048.
Dengue disease surveillance and vector surveillance are presumed to detect dengue outbreaks at an early stage and to save--through early response activities--resources, and reduce the social and economic impact of outbreaks on individuals, health systems and economies. The aim of this study is to unveil evidence on the cost of dengue outbreaks.
Economic evidence on dengue outbreaks was gathered by conducting a literature review and collecting information on the costs of recent dengue outbreaks in 4 countries: Peru, Dominican Republic, Vietnam, and Indonesia. The literature review distinguished between costs of dengue illness including cost of dengue outbreaks, cost of interventions and cost-effectiveness of interventions.
Seventeen publications on cost of dengue showed a large range of costs from 0.2 Million US$ in Venezuela to 135.2 Million US$ in Brazil. However, these figures were not standardized to make them comparable. Furthermore, dengue outbreak costs are calculated differently across the publications, and cost of dengue illness is used interchangeably with cost of dengue outbreaks. Only one paper from Australia analysed the resources saved through active dengue surveillance. Costs of vector control interventions have been reported in 4 studies, indicating that the costs of such interventions are lower than those of actual outbreaks. Nine papers focussed on the cost-effectiveness of dengue vaccines or dengue vector control; they do not provide any direct information on cost of dengue outbreaks, but their modelling methodologies could guide future research on cost-effectiveness of national surveillance systems.The country case studies--conducted in very different geographic and health system settings - unveiled rough estimates for 2011 outbreak costs of: 12 million US$ in Vietnam, 6.75 million US$ in Indonesia, 4.5 million US$ in Peru and 2.8 million US$ in Dominican Republic (all in 2012 US$). The proportions of the different cost components (vector control; surveillance; information, education and communication; direct medical and indirect costs), as percentage of total costs, differed across the respective countries. Resources used for dengue disease control and treatment were country specific.
The evidence so far collected further confirms the methodological challenges in this field: 1) to define technically dengue outbreaks (what do we measure?) and 2) to measure accurately the costs in prospective field studies (how do we measure?). Currently, consensus on the technical definition of an outbreak is sought through the International Research Consortium on Dengue Risk Assessment, Management and Surveillance (IDAMS). Best practice guidelines should be further developed, also to improve the quality and comparability of cost study findings. Modelling the costs of dengue outbreaks and validating these models through field studies should guide further research.
登革热疾病监测和病媒监测被认为可以在早期发现登革热疫情,并通过早期应对活动节省资源,降低疫情对个人、卫生系统和经济的社会和经济影响。本研究旨在揭示登革热疫情成本的证据。
通过文献综述和收集 4 个国家(秘鲁、多米尼加共和国、越南和印度尼西亚)最近登革热疫情成本信息,收集登革热疫情成本的经济证据。文献综述将登革热成本分为登革热疾病成本(包括登革热疫情成本、干预成本和干预成本效益)。
17 篇关于登革热成本的出版物显示,从委内瑞拉的 200 万美元到巴西的 1.352 亿美元,成本差异很大。然而,这些数字未经标准化,因此无法进行比较。此外,不同出版物对登革热疫情成本的计算方法不同,登革热疾病成本与登革热疫情成本可互换使用。只有来自澳大利亚的一篇论文分析了通过主动登革热监测节省的资源。有 4 项研究报告了病媒控制干预措施的成本,表明此类干预措施的成本低于实际疫情的成本。9 篇论文集中在登革热疫苗或登革热病媒控制的成本效益上;它们没有提供任何关于登革热疫情成本的直接信息,但它们的建模方法可以为国家监测系统的成本效益研究提供指导。在非常不同的地理和卫生系统环境中进行的国家案例研究揭示了 2011 年疫情成本的粗略估计:越南 1200 万美元、印度尼西亚 675 万美元、秘鲁 450 万美元和多米尼加共和国 280 万美元(均按 2012 年美元计算)。不同成本构成部分(病媒控制;监测;信息、教育和宣传;直接医疗和间接成本)在总费用中的比例因各自国家而异。用于登革热疾病控制和治疗的资源因国家而异。
迄今为止收集的证据进一步证实了该领域的方法学挑战:1)从技术上定义登革热疫情(我们测量什么?)和 2)在前瞻性实地研究中准确测量成本(我们如何测量?)。目前,正在通过国际登革热风险评估、管理和监测研究联盟(IDAMS)寻求对疫情的技术定义达成共识。还应进一步制定最佳实践准则,以提高成本研究结果的质量和可比性。通过实地研究对登革热疫情成本进行建模并验证这些模型应指导进一步的研究。