Chaudhury Sumona, Arlington Lauren, Brenan Shelby, Kairuki Allan Kaijunga, Meda Amunga Robson, Isangula Kahabi G, Mponzi Victor, Bishanga Dunstan, Thomas Erica, Msemo Georgina, Azayo Mary, Molinier Alice, Nelson Brett D
Departments of Epidemiology and Global Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Division of Global Health, MassGeneral Hospital for Children, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Dec 1;16(1):681. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1924-2.
Helping Babies Breathe (HBB) has become the gold standard globally for training birth-attendants in neonatal resuscitation in low-resource settings in efforts to reduce early newborn asphyxia and mortality. The purpose of this study was to do a first-ever activity-based cost-analysis of at-scale HBB program implementation and initial follow-up in a large region of Tanzania and evaluate costs of national scale-up as one component of a multi-method external evaluation of the implementation of HBB at scale in Tanzania.
We used activity-based costing to examine budget expense data during the two-month implementation and follow-up of HBB in one of the target regions. Activity-cost centers included administrative, initial training (including resuscitation equipment), and follow-up training expenses. Sensitivity analysis was utilized to project cost scenarios incurred to achieve countrywide expansion of the program across all mainland regions of Tanzania and to model costs of program maintenance over one and five years following initiation.
Total costs for the Mbeya Region were $202,240, with the highest proportion due to initial training and equipment (45.2%), followed by central program administration (37.2%), and follow-up visits (17.6%). Within Mbeya, 49 training sessions were undertaken, involving the training of 1,341 health providers from 336 health facilities in eight districts. To similarly expand the HBB program across the 25 regions of mainland Tanzania, the total economic cost is projected to be around $4,000,000 (around $600 per facility). Following sensitivity analyses, the estimated total for all Tanzania initial rollout lies between $2,934,793 to $4,309,595. In order to maintain the program nationally under the current model, it is estimated it would cost $2,019,115 for a further one year and $5,640,794 for a further five years of ongoing program support.
HBB implementation is a relatively low-cost intervention with potential for high impact on perinatal mortality in resource-poor settings. It is shown here that nationwide expansion of this program across the range of health provision levels and regions of Tanzania would be feasible. This study provides policymakers and investors with the relevant cost-estimation for national rollout of this potentially neonatal life-saving intervention.
“帮助婴儿呼吸”(HBB)已成为全球在资源匮乏地区培训接生员进行新生儿复苏的金标准,旨在降低早期新生儿窒息和死亡率。本研究的目的是首次对坦桑尼亚一个大区域内大规模实施HBB项目及初始随访进行基于活动的成本分析,并评估全国范围内扩大规模的成本,作为对坦桑尼亚大规模实施HBB进行多方法外部评估的一个组成部分。
我们使用基于活动的成本核算方法,审查了目标区域之一在HBB实施和随访的两个月期间的预算支出数据。活动成本中心包括行政、初始培训(包括复苏设备)和后续培训费用。利用敏感性分析来预测在坦桑尼亚大陆所有地区实现该项目全国范围扩展所需的成本情况,并模拟项目启动后一年和五年的维护成本。
姆贝亚地区的总成本为202,240美元,其中初始培训和设备所占比例最高(45.2%),其次是中央项目管理(37.2%)和随访(17.6%)。在姆贝亚地区,共举办了49期培训班,培训了来自八个区336个卫生设施的1341名卫生工作者。要在坦桑尼亚大陆的25个地区同样扩大HBB项目,预计总经济成本约为400万美元(每个设施约600美元)。经过敏感性分析,坦桑尼亚全国首次推广的估计总成本在2,934,793美元至4,309,595美元之间。为了按照当前模式在全国维持该项目,估计再持续一年将花费2,019,115美元,再持续五年的项目支持将花费5,640,794美元。
HBB实施是一种成本相对较低的干预措施,在资源匮乏地区对围产期死亡率有产生重大影响的潜力。研究表明,在坦桑尼亚不同卫生服务水平的地区和区域范围内全国推广该项目是可行的。本研究为政策制定者和投资者提供了在全国推广这种可能挽救新生儿生命的干预措施的相关成本估计。