Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK
TB Centre, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2023 Feb;8(2). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010306.
Nosocomial () transmission substantially impacts health workers, patients and communities. Guidelines for tuberculosis infection prevention and control (TB IPC) exist but implementation in many settings remains suboptimal. Evidence is needed on cost-effective investments to prevent transmission that are feasible in routine clinic environments.
A set of TB IPC interventions was codesigned with local stakeholders using system dynamics modelling techniques that addressed both core activities and enabling actions to support implementation. An economic evaluation of these interventions was conducted at two clinics in KwaZulu-Natal, employing agent-based models of transmission within the clinics and in their catchment populations. Intervention costs included the costs of the enablers (eg, strengthened supervision, community sensitisation) identified by stakeholders to ensure uptake and adherence.
All intervention scenarios modelled, inclusive of the relevant enablers, cost less than US$200 per disability-adjusted life-year (DALY) averted and were very cost-effective in comparison to South Africa's opportunity cost-based threshold (US$3200 per DALY averted). Two interventions, building modifications to improve ventilation and maximising use of the existing Central Chronic Medicines Dispensing and Distribution system to reduce the number of clinic attendees, were found to be cost saving over the 10-year model time horizon. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were sensitive to assumptions on baseline clinic ventilation rates, the prevalence of infectious TB in clinic attendees and future HIV incidence but remained highly cost-effective under all uncertainty analysis scenarios.
TB IPC interventions in clinics, including the enabling actions to ensure their feasibility, afford very good value for money and should be prioritised for implementation within the South African health system.
医院获得性 () 传播对卫生工作者、患者和社区有重大影响。结核病感染预防和控制 (TB IPC) 指南已经存在,但在许多情况下的实施仍不尽如人意。需要有证据表明,在常规诊所环境中,投资于预防 传播的具有成本效益的干预措施是可行的,并且可以控制成本。
使用系统动力学建模技术,与当地利益相关者共同设计了一套 TB IPC 干预措施,这些技术既解决了核心活动,又为支持实施提供了必要的支持措施。在夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省的两个诊所进行了这些干预措施的经济评估,采用基于代理的模型来模拟诊所及其集水区人群中的 传播。干预成本包括利益相关者确定的促进因素(例如加强监督、社区宣传)的成本,以确保采用和遵守。
所有建模的干预方案,包括相关的促进因素,每避免一个残疾调整生命年 (DALY) 的成本都低于 200 美元,与南非基于机会成本的阈值(每避免一个 DALY 的成本为 3200 美元)相比,非常具有成本效益。两项干预措施,即改善通风的建筑改造和最大限度地利用现有的中央慢性药物配给和分发系统来减少诊所就诊人数,在 10 年模型时间范围内被发现具有成本效益。增量成本效益比对基线诊所通风率、诊所就诊者中传染性结核的流行率和未来 HIV 发病率的假设较为敏感,但在所有不确定性分析情景下仍然具有高度成本效益。
诊所中的 TB IPC 干预措施,包括确保其可行性的促进措施,物有所值,应在南非卫生系统中优先实施。