Department of Health Policy, School of Public Health, Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
Department of Epidemiology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2023 Sep 4;25(11):1719-1726. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntad111.
The aim of this study is to quantify the cost-effectiveness of four tobacco control interventions: Tobacco taxation, mass media campaigns, school programs, and cessation support, and to illustrate how available evaluation tools can be adapted to the local setting.
We used the dynamic population health modeling-health impact assessment tool to project the future smoking prevalence associated with the interventions and to simulate the resulting smoking-related disease burden over time. Applying the most recent available national Mongolian data as input, the costs and effects of four interventions were compared to a business-as-usual scenario, resulting in costs per life year gained and per disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) averted.
Three years after implementation, all interventions reduce the prevalence of current smoking, with the strongest reduction observed with the increase in tobacco tax (5.1% points), followed by mass media campaigns (1.6% points), school programs (1.3% points), and cessation support interventions (0.6% points). School programs were a cost-saving tobacco control intervention compared to current practice in Mongolia, while the other programs resulted in additional costs compared to business as usual. Compared to the World Health Organization (WHO) thresholds, all interventions would be considered "very cost-effective" in terms of cost per DALY averted (below US$ 4295 per DALY averted) in Mongolia.
Large-scale interventions such as taxation and mass media campaigns result in both cost-effectiveness and important health benefits in relation to intervention costs. Reducing the prevalence of smoking among the male population would be particularly worthwhile in Mongolia.
This study shows that in Mongolia school programs were a cost-saving intervention, while the cost-effectiveness ratios were US$ 25 per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) averted for mass media campaigns, US$ 74 for taxation, and US$ 1961 for cessation support interventions. Compared to the WHO thresholds, all interventions would be considered "very cost-effective" in terms of expenses per DALY averted (<US$ 4295 per DALY averted), making it beneficial to scale up the WHO-Monitor tobacco use and prevention, Protect people from smoke, Offer help to quit smoking, Warn about the danger, Enforce bans, and Raise taxes (MPOWER) interventions to reduce the burden from smoking in Mongolia.
本研究旨在量化四种控烟干预措施(烟草税、大众媒体宣传、学校项目和戒烟支持)的成本效益,并说明如何将现有的评估工具适应当地情况。
我们使用动态人群健康模型-健康影响评估工具来预测干预措施未来对吸烟流行率的影响,并模拟随之而来的与吸烟相关的疾病负担随时间的变化。将最新的蒙古国家数据作为输入,将四种干预措施的成本和效果与常规情况进行比较,得出每获得一个生命年和每避免一个残疾调整生命年(DALY)的成本。
实施三年后,所有干预措施均降低了当前吸烟率,其中烟草税增加的效果最强(降低 5.1 个百分点),其次是大众媒体宣传(降低 1.6 个百分点)、学校项目(降低 1.3 个百分点)和戒烟支持干预(降低 0.6 个百分点)。与蒙古目前的做法相比,学校项目是一种节省成本的控烟干预措施,而其他项目与常规情况相比则会导致额外的成本。与世界卫生组织(WHO)的阈值相比,所有干预措施在蒙古都被认为是“非常具有成本效益的”,即每避免一个 DALY 的成本低于 4295 美元。
大规模干预措施,如税收和大众媒体宣传,在干预成本方面既具有成本效益,又对健康有重要的益处。在蒙古,降低男性人口的吸烟率将特别有价值。
本研究表明,在蒙古,学校项目是一种节省成本的干预措施,而大众媒体宣传的成本效益比为每避免一个 DALY 花费 25 美元,税收为 74 美元,戒烟支持干预为 1961 美元。与 WHO 的阈值相比,所有干预措施在避免每 DALY 的费用方面都被认为是“非常具有成本效益的”(避免每 DALY 的费用低于 4295 美元),这有利于在蒙古扩大世界卫生组织-监测烟草使用和预防、保护人们免受烟雾危害、提供戒烟帮助、警告危险、执行禁令和提高税收(MPOWER)干预措施,以减轻吸烟对健康的影响。