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低收入和中等收入国家中两种现金转移策略对受结核病影响的贫困家庭灾难性支出的预防作用比较:一项经济建模研究

Comparison of two cash transfer strategies to prevent catastrophic costs for poor tuberculosis-affected households in low- and middle-income countries: An economic modelling study.

作者信息

Rudgard William E, Evans Carlton A, Sweeney Sedona, Wingfield Tom, Lönnroth Knut, Barreira Draurio, Boccia Delia

机构信息

Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), London, United Kingdom.

Innovation For Health And Development (IFHAD), Section of Infectious Diseases & Immunity, Imperial College London and Wellcome Trust Imperial College Centre for Global Health Research, London, United Kingdom.

出版信息

PLoS Med. 2017 Nov 7;14(11):e1002418. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002418. eCollection 2017 Nov.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Illness-related costs for patients with tuberculosis (TB) ≥20% of pre-illness annual household income predict adverse treatment outcomes and have been termed "catastrophic." Social protection initiatives, including cash transfers, are endorsed to help prevent catastrophic costs. With this aim, cash transfers may either be provided to defray TB-related costs of households with a confirmed TB diagnosis (termed a "TB-specific" approach); or to increase income of households with high TB risk to strengthen their economic resilience (termed a "TB-sensitive" approach). The impact of cash transfers provided with each of these approaches might vary. We undertook an economic modelling study from the patient perspective to compare the potential of these 2 cash transfer approaches to prevent catastrophic costs.

METHODS AND FINDINGS

Model inputs for 7 low- and middle-income countries (Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Ghana, Mexico, Tanzania, and Yemen) were retrieved by literature review and included countries' mean patient TB-related costs, mean household income, mean cash transfers, and estimated TB-specific and TB-sensitive target populations. Analyses were completed for drug-susceptible (DS) TB-related costs in all 7 out of 7 countries, and additionally for drug-resistant (DR) TB-related costs in 1 of the 7 countries with available data. All cost data were reported in 2013 international dollars ($). The target population for TB-specific cash transfers was poor households with a confirmed TB diagnosis, and for TB-sensitive cash transfers was poor households already targeted by countries' established poverty-reduction cash transfer programme. Cash transfers offered in countries, unrelated to TB, ranged from $217 to $1,091/year/household. Before cash transfers, DS TB-related costs were catastrophic in 6 out of 7 countries. If cash transfers were provided with a TB-specific approach, alone they would be insufficient to prevent DS TB catastrophic costs in 4 out of 6 countries, and when increased enough to prevent DS TB catastrophic costs would require a budget between $3.8 million (95% CI: $3.8 million-$3.8 million) and $75 million (95% CI: $50 million-$100 million) per country. If instead cash transfers were provided with a TB-sensitive approach, alone they would be insufficient to prevent DS TB-related catastrophic costs in any of the 6 countries, and when increased enough to prevent DS TB catastrophic costs would require a budget between $298 million (95% CI: $219 million-$378 million) and $165,367 million (95% CI: $134,085 million-$196,425 million) per country. DR TB-related costs were catastrophic before and after TB-specific or TB-sensitive cash transfers in 1 out of 1 countries. Sensitivity analyses showed our findings to be robust to imputation of missing TB-related cost components, and use of 10% or 30% instead of 20% as the threshold for measuring catastrophic costs. Key limitations were using national average data and not considering other health and social benefits of cash transfers.

CONCLUSIONS

A TB-sensitive cash transfer approach to increase all poor households' income may have broad benefits by reducing poverty, but is unlikely to be as effective or affordable for preventing TB catastrophic costs as a TB-specific cash transfer approach to defray TB-related costs only in poor households with a confirmed TB diagnosis. Preventing DR TB-related catastrophic costs will require considerable additional investment whether a TB-sensitive or a TB-specific cash transfer approach is used.

摘要

背景

结核病患者的疾病相关费用≥病前家庭年收入的20%预示着不良治疗结局,被称为“灾难性的”。包括现金转移在内的社会保护举措被认可有助于预防灾难性费用。出于这一目的,现金转移可以提供给确诊患有结核病的家庭以支付与结核病相关的费用(称为“结核病特异性”方法);或者增加结核病高风险家庭的收入以增强其经济复原力(称为“结核病敏感”方法)。采用每种方法提供现金转移的影响可能有所不同。我们从患者角度进行了一项经济建模研究,以比较这两种现金转移方法预防灾难性费用的潜力。

方法和结果

通过文献综述获取了7个低收入和中等收入国家(巴西、哥伦比亚、厄瓜多尔、加纳、墨西哥、坦桑尼亚和也门)的模型输入数据,包括各国患者与结核病相关的平均费用、家庭平均收入、平均现金转移以及估计的结核病特异性和结核病敏感目标人群。对所有7个国家中与药物敏感(DS)结核病相关的费用进行了分析,另外还对7个有可用数据的国家中的1个国家与耐药(DR)结核病相关的费用进行了分析。所有成本数据均以2013年国际美元($)报告。结核病特异性现金转移的目标人群是确诊患有结核病的贫困家庭,而结核病敏感现金转移的目标人群是已被国家既定的减贫现金转移计划列为目标的贫困家庭。各国提供的与结核病无关的现金转移范围为每年每户217美元至1091美元。在提供现金转移之前,7个国家中有6个国家与DS结核病相关的费用具有灾难性。如果采用结核病特异性方法提供现金转移,仅靠这些转移不足以预防6个国家中4个国家的DS结核病灾难性费用,而当增加到足以预防DS结核病灾难性费用时,每个国家需要的预算在380万美元(95%CI:380万美元 - 380万美元)至7500万美元(95%CI:5000万美元 - 1亿美元)之间。相反,如果采用结核病敏感方法提供现金转移,仅靠这些转移不足以预防6个国家中任何一个国家与DS结核病相关的灾难性费用,而当增加到足以预防DS结核病灾难性费用时,每个国家需要的预算在2.98亿美元(95%CI:2.19亿美元 - 3.78亿美元)至1653.67亿美元(95%CI:1340.85亿美元 - 1964.25亿美元)之间。在1个国家中,与DR结核病相关的费用在结核病特异性或结核病敏感现金转移之前和之后均具有灾难性。敏感性分析表明,我们的研究结果对于缺失的与结核病相关成本组成部分的插补以及使用10%或30%而非20%作为衡量灾难性费用的阈值具有稳健性。主要局限性在于使用国家平均数据且未考虑现金转移的其他健康和社会效益。

结论

一种增加所有贫困家庭收入的结核病敏感现金转移方法可能通过减少贫困带来广泛益处,但对于预防结核病灾难性费用而言,可能不如仅针对确诊患有结核病的贫困家庭支付与结核病相关费用的结核病特异性现金转移方法有效或经济实惠。无论采用结核病敏感还是结核病特异性现金转移方法,预防与DR结核病相关的灾难性费用都将需要大量额外投资。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c1fe/5675360/dd528743f3a9/pmed.1002418.g001.jpg

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