Kasteng Frida, Murray Joanna, Cousens Simon, Sarrassat Sophie, Steel Jennifer, Meda Nicolas, Ouedraogo Moctar, Head Roy, Borghi Josephine
Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Development Media International CIC, London, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2018 Jul 16;3(4):e000809. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000809. eCollection 2018.
Child health promotion through mass media has not been rigorously evaluated for cost-effectiveness in low-income and middle-income countries. We assessed the cost-effectiveness of a mass radio campaign on health-seeking behaviours for child survival within a trial in Burkina Faso and at national scale.
We collected provider cost data prospectively alongside a 35-month cluster randomised trial in rural Burkina Faso in 2012-2015. Out-of-pocket costs of care-seeking were estimated through a household survey. We modelled intervention effects on child survival based on increased care-seeking and estimated the intervention's incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) in terms of the cost per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) averted versus current practice. Model uncertainty was gauged using one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. We projected the ICER of national-scale implementation in five sub-Saharan countries with differing media structures. All costs are in 2015 USD.
The provider cost of the campaign was $7 749 128 ($9 146 101 including household costs). The campaign broadcast radio spots 74 480 times and 4610 2-hour shows through seven local radio stations, reaching approximately 2.4 million people including 620 000 direct beneficiaries (pregnant women and children under five). It resulted in an average estimated 24% increase in care-seeking for children under five and a 7% reduction in child mortality per year. The ICER was estimated at $94 ($111 including household costs (95% CI -38 to 320)). The projected provider cost per DALY averted of a national level campaign in Burkina Faso, Burundi, Malawi, Mozambique and Niger in 2018-2020, varied between $7 in Malawi to $27 in Burundi.
This study suggests that mass-media campaigns can be very cost-effective in improving child survival in areas with high media penetration and can potentially benefit from considerable economies of scale.
NCT01517230; Results.
在低收入和中等收入国家,通过大众媒体促进儿童健康的成本效益尚未得到严格评估。我们在布基纳法索的一项试验以及全国范围内评估了一场关于儿童生存寻求医疗行为的广播宣传活动的成本效益。
2012年至2015年期间,我们在布基纳法索农村地区进行了一项为期35个月的整群随机试验,前瞻性收集了提供者成本数据。通过家庭调查估算了寻求医疗的自付费用。我们根据增加的寻求医疗行为对儿童生存的干预效果进行建模,并以避免的每残疾调整生命年(DALY)成本与当前做法相比,估算了干预的增量成本效益比(ICER)。使用单因素和概率敏感性分析来衡量模型的不确定性。我们预测了在五个媒体结构不同的撒哈拉以南国家进行全国范围实施的ICER。所有成本均以2015年美元计算。
该宣传活动的提供者成本为7749128美元(包括家庭成本在内为9146101美元)。该活动通过七个当地广播电台播放了74480次广播广告和4610个两小时节目,覆盖了约240万人,包括62万直接受益者(孕妇和五岁以下儿童)。这导致五岁以下儿童的平均寻求医疗行为估计增加了24%,儿童死亡率每年降低了7%。ICER估计为94美元(包括家庭成本在内为111美元(95%CI -38至320))。2018年至2020年在布基纳法索、布隆迪、马拉维、莫桑比克和尼日尔进行全国范围宣传活动,预计避免每DALY的提供者成本在马拉维为7美元至布隆迪为27美元之间。
本研究表明,大众媒体宣传活动在媒体渗透率高的地区改善儿童生存方面可能具有很高的成本效益,并且可能受益于显著的规模经济。
NCT01517230;结果。