Kirigia Joses Muthuri, Muthuri Rosenabi Deborah Karimi
African Sustainable Development Research Consortium (ASDRC), P.O. Box 6994 00100 GPO, Kenyatta Avenue, Nairobi, Kenya.
Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences and Humanities, United States International University, Nairobi, Kenya.
Infect Dis Poverty. 2016 Jun 1;5(1):43. doi: 10.1186/s40249-016-0138-5.
In 2014, almost half of the global tuberculosis deaths occurred in the World Health Organization (WHO) African Region. Approximately 21.5 % of the 6 060 742 TB cases (new and relapse) reported to the WHO in 2014 were in the African Region. The specific objective of this study was to estimate future gross domestic product (GDP) losses associated with TB deaths in the African Region for use in advocating for better strategies to prevent and control tuberculosis.
The cost-of-illness method was used to estimate non-health GDP losses associated with TB deaths. Future non-health GDP losses were discounted at 3 %. The analysis was conducted for three income groups of countries. One-way sensitivity analysis at 5 and 10 % discount rates was undertaken to assess the impact on the expected non-health GDP loss.
The 0.753 million tuberculosis deaths that occurred in the African Region in 2014 would be expected to decrease the future non-health GDP by International Dollars (Int$) 50.4 billion. Nearly 40.8, 46.7 and 12.5 % of that loss would come from high and upper-middle- countries or lower-middle- and low-income countries, respectively. The average total non-health GDP loss would be Int$66 872 per tuberculosis death. The average non-health GDP loss per TB death was Int$167 592 for Group 1, Int$69 808 for Group 2 and Int$21 513 for Group 3.
Tuberculosis exerts a sizeable economic burden on the economies of the WHO AFR countries. This implies the need to strongly advocate for better strategies to prevent and control tuberculosis and to help countries end the epidemic of tuberculosis by 2030, as envisioned in the United Nations General Assembly resolution on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
2014年,全球近一半的结核病死亡发生在世卫组织非洲区域。2014年向世卫组织报告的6060742例结核病病例(新发病例和复发病例)中,约21.5%在非洲区域。本研究的具体目标是估计非洲区域与结核病死亡相关的未来国内生产总值(GDP)损失,以用于倡导更好的结核病预防和控制策略。
采用疾病成本法估计与结核病死亡相关的非卫生领域GDP损失。未来的非卫生领域GDP损失按3%进行贴现。对三个收入组别的国家进行了分析。采用5%和10%贴现率进行单向敏感性分析,以评估对预期非卫生领域GDP损失的影响。
预计2014年非洲区域发生的75.3万例结核病死亡将使未来非卫生领域GDP减少5040亿国际美元(Int$)。该损失中,近40.8%、46.7%和12.5%将分别来自高收入和中高收入国家、中低收入和低收入国家。每例结核病死亡的平均非卫生领域GDP总损失为66872国际美元。第1组每例结核病死亡的平均非卫生领域GDP损失为167592国际美元,第2组为69808国际美元,第3组为21513国际美元。
结核病给世卫组织非洲区域国家的经济带来了巨大的经济负担。这意味着需要大力倡导更好的结核病预防和控制策略,并帮助各国按照联合国大会关于可持续发展目标(SDGs)的决议所设想的那样,在2030年前结束结核病流行。