Rakuomi Vivian, Okalebo Faith, Ndwigah Stanley, Mbugua Levi
Ministry of Health, Nairobi, Kenya.
School of Pharmacy, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.
Cost Eff Resour Alloc. 2017 Jul 14;15:14. doi: 10.1186/s12962-017-0076-5. eCollection 2017.
In 2013, 78% of malaria deaths occurred in children aged 5 years and below, in sub-Saharan Africa. Treatment of severe malaria requires a health facility with inpatient care. However, in most sub-Sahara African countries, access to health facilities is a major problem. Pre-referral antimalarial treatments aim to delay the progress of severe malaria as patients seek to access health facilities. Rectal artesunate can be administered in the community as a pre-referral treatment in rural hard-to-reach areas. In Kenya, though pre-referral rectal artesunate has been included in the National Guidelines for pre-referral treatment, it is yet to be implemented in the public healthcare system. It is important, therefore, to establish its cost-utility compared to current parenteral treatments. This study evaluated the cost-utility of provision of pre-referral treatments by community health workers compared to similar services at a primary health facility.
This was a decision model-based cost-utility analysis, comparing pre-referral antimalarial treatments provided by: community health workers (CHWs), primary health facility, direct access to a tertiary health facility and no access to treatment. A theoretical cohort, of 1000 children, who were below 5 years old; residing in rural hard-to-reach areas, was taken as the reference population. Data was collected through key informant interviews, to assess the costs, while key measures of effectiveness, were obtained from existing studies. The key measure of outcomes was Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALYS) averted. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis was carried out to assess the robustness of the model.
Provision of rectal pre-referral treatment by community health workers was estimated to avert 13,276 DALYs, at a cost of $68,428 for a cohort of 1000 children. Provision of rectal pre-referral treatment at a primary health facility was estimated to avert 9993 DALYs, at a cost of $73,826 for a cohort of 1000 children, while going directly to a tertiary health facility was estimated to avert 15,801 DALYs, at a cost of $114,903 for a cohort of 1000 children. The incremental cost effectiveness ratios for provision of pre-referral treatment by community health care and primary health workers were $5.11 and $7.30 per DALYs averted respectively.
Use of CHWs was more cost effective than provision of pre-referral treatments at a primary health facility especially, with high referral compliance. Rectal artesunate can easily be administered by community health workers, unlike parenteral pre-referral interventions.
2013年,撒哈拉以南非洲地区78%的疟疾死亡病例发生在5岁及以下儿童中。重症疟疾的治疗需要具备住院护理的医疗机构。然而,在大多数撒哈拉以南非洲国家,获得医疗机构服务是一个主要问题。转诊前抗疟治疗旨在在患者寻求医疗机构服务时延缓重症疟疾的进展。在农村难以到达的地区,直肠用青蒿琥酯可作为转诊前治疗在社区使用。在肯尼亚,尽管转诊前直肠用青蒿琥酯已被纳入国家转诊前治疗指南,但尚未在公共医疗系统中实施。因此,与目前的肠外治疗相比,确定其成本效益很重要。本研究评估了社区卫生工作者提供转诊前治疗与初级卫生机构类似服务相比的成本效益。
这是一项基于决策模型的成本效益分析,比较了以下几种情况提供的转诊前抗疟治疗:社区卫生工作者(CHW)、初级卫生机构、直接前往三级卫生机构以及未接受治疗。以1000名居住在农村难以到达地区的5岁以下儿童作为理论队列作为参考人群。通过关键 informant 访谈收集数据以评估成本,而有效性的关键指标则从现有研究中获取。结果的关键指标是避免的伤残调整生命年(DALYs)。进行概率敏感性分析以评估模型的稳健性。
对于1000名儿童的队列,社区卫生工作者提供直肠转诊前治疗估计可避免13276个DALYs,成本为68428美元。初级卫生机构提供直肠转诊前治疗估计可避免9993个DALYs,对于1000名儿童的队列成本为73826美元,而直接前往三级卫生机构估计可避免15801个DALYs,对于1000名儿童的队列成本为114903美元。社区卫生保健和初级卫生工作者提供转诊前治疗的增量成本效益比分别为每避免一个DALYs 5.11美元和7.30美元。
使用社区卫生工作者比在初级卫生机构提供转诊前治疗更具成本效益,特别是在转诊依从性较高的情况下。与肠外转诊前干预措施不同,社区卫生工作者可以轻松给予直肠用青蒿琥酯。