Division of Reproductive Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Division of Reproductive Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Contraception. 2022 Mar;107:68-73. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2021.10.009. Epub 2021 Nov 5.
During the 2016-2017 Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak, the prevention of unintended pregnancies was identified as a primary strategy to prevent birth defects. This study estimated the cost-effectiveness of the Zika Contraception Access Network (Z-CAN), an emergency response intervention that provided women in Puerto Rico with access to the full range of reversible contraception at no cost and compared results with a preimplementation hypothetical cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA).
We evaluated costs and outcomes of Z-CAN from a health sector perspective compared to no intervention using a decision tree model. Number of people served, contraception methods mix, and costs under Z-CAN were from actual program data and other input parameters were from the literature. Health outcome measures included the number of Zika-associated microcephaly (ZAM) cases and unintended pregnancies. The economic benefits of the Z-CAN intervention were ZIKV-associated direct costs avoided, including lifetime medical and supportive costs associated with ZAM cases, costs of monitoring ZIKV-exposed pregnancies and infants born from Zika-virus infected mothers, and the costs of unintended pregnancies prevented during the outbreak as a result of increased contraception use through the Z-CAN intervention.
The Z-CAN intervention cost a total of $26.1 million, including costs for the full range of reversible contraceptive methods, contraception related services, and programmatic activities. The program is estimated to have prevented 85% of cases of estimated ZAM cases and unintended pregnancies in the absence of Z-CAN. The intervention cost was projected to have been more than offset by $79.9 million in ZIKV-associated costs avoided, 96% of which were lifetime ZAM-associated costs, as well as $137.0 million from avoided unintended pregnancies, with total net savings in one year of $216.9 million. The results were consistent with the previous CEA study.
Z-CAN was likely cost-saving in the context of a public health emergency response setting.
在 2016-2017 年寨卡病毒(ZIKV)爆发期间,防止意外怀孕被确定为预防出生缺陷的主要策略。本研究评估了寨卡避孕获取网络(Z-CAN)的成本效益,这是一项紧急应对干预措施,为波多黎各的妇女提供免费获得全面可逆避孕的机会,并将结果与实施前的假设成本效益分析(CEA)进行了比较。
我们从卫生部门的角度评估了 Z-CAN 的成本和结果,与没有干预的情况相比,使用决策树模型。Z-CAN 服务的人数、避孕方法组合以及成本来自实际项目数据,其他输入参数来自文献。健康结果测量包括寨卡相关小头畸形(ZAM)病例和意外怀孕的数量。Z-CAN 干预的经济效益是避免的寨卡病毒相关直接成本,包括与 ZAM 病例相关的终生医疗和支持成本、监测寨卡病毒暴露的妊娠和由寨卡病毒感染的母亲所生婴儿的成本,以及由于通过 Z-CAN 干预增加避孕措施而在疫情期间避免的意外怀孕的成本。
Z-CAN 干预总费用为 2610 万美元,包括全面可逆避孕方法、避孕相关服务和项目活动的费用。据估计,如果没有 Z-CAN,该项目将预防 85%的估计 ZAM 病例和意外怀孕。该干预措施预计将通过避免 7990 万美元的寨卡病毒相关成本,其中 96%是与 ZAM 相关的终生成本,以及避免 1.37 亿美元的意外怀孕,在一年内的总净节省为 2.169 亿美元,得到超过 2610 万美元的成本。结果与之前的 CEA 研究一致。
在公共卫生应急响应环境下,Z-CAN 可能具有成本效益。