Maredza Mandy, Chola Lumbwe, Hofman Karen
Priority Cost-Effective Lessons for Systems Strengthening-South Africa (PRICELESS SA), Medical Research Council/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transition Research Unit (Agincourt), Johannesburg, South Africa ; School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Cost Eff Resour Alloc. 2016 Jan 26;14:2. doi: 10.1186/s12962-015-0049-5. eCollection 2016.
Newborn mortality, comprising a third of all under-5 deaths, has hardly changed in low and middle income countries (LMICs) including South Africa over the past decade. To attain the MDG 4 target, greater emphasis must be placed on wide-scale implementation of proven, cost-effective interventions. This paper reviews economic evidence on effective neonatal health interventions in LMICs from 2000-2013; documents lessons for South African policy on neonatal health; and identifies gaps and areas for future research.
A narrative review was performed in leading public health databases for full economic evaluations conducted between 2000 and 2013. Data extraction from the articles included in the review was guided by the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) checklist, and the quality of the included economic evaluations was assessed using the Quality of Health Economics Studies Instrument (QHES).
Twenty-seven economic evaluations were identified, from South East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, with those from sub-Saharan Africa primarily focused on HIV/AIDS. Packages of care to prevent neonatal mortality were more cost-effective than vertical interventions. A wide variability in methodological approaches challenges the comparability of study results between countries. In South Africa, there is limited cost-effectiveness evidence for the interventions proposed by the National Perinatal Morbidity and Mortality Committee.
Neonatal strategies have a strong health system focus but this review suggests that strengthening community care could be an additional component for averting neonatal deaths. While some evidence exists, having a more complete understanding of how to most effectively deploy scarce resources for neonatal health in South Africa in the post-2015 era is essential.
在包括南非在内的低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),新生儿死亡占所有5岁以下儿童死亡人数的三分之一,在过去十年中几乎没有变化。为实现千年发展目标4的目标,必须更加强调广泛实施经过验证的、具有成本效益的干预措施。本文回顾了2000 - 2013年期间低收入和中等收入国家有效新生儿健康干预措施的经济证据;记录了南非新生儿健康政策的经验教训;并确定了差距和未来研究领域。
在主要公共卫生数据库中对2000年至2013年期间进行的全面经济评估进行叙述性综述。根据综合卫生经济评估报告标准(CHEERS)清单指导从综述中纳入的文章中提取数据,并使用卫生经济学研究质量工具(QHES)评估纳入的经济评估的质量。
确定了27项经济评估,来自东南亚和撒哈拉以南非洲,其中撒哈拉以南非洲的评估主要集中在艾滋病毒/艾滋病。预防新生儿死亡的综合护理方案比垂直干预措施更具成本效益。方法学方法的广泛差异挑战了各国研究结果的可比性。在南非,国家围产期发病率和死亡率委员会提议的干预措施的成本效益证据有限。
新生儿战略高度关注卫生系统,但本综述表明,加强社区护理可能是避免新生儿死亡的另一个组成部分。虽然存在一些证据,但在2015年后时代更全面地了解如何最有效地为南非的新生儿健康调配稀缺资源至关重要。