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The investment case for hepatitis B and C in South Africa: adaptation and innovation in policy analysis for disease program scale-up

机译:南非乙型肝炎和C的投资情况:疾病计划扩大的政策分析的适应与创新

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Even though WHO has approved global goals for hepatitis elimination, most countries have yet to establish programs for hepatitis B and C, which account for 320 million infections and over a million deaths annually. One reason for this slow response is the paucity of robust, compelling analyses showing that national HBV/HCV programs could have a significant impact on these epidemics and save lives in a cost-effective, affordable manner. In this context, our team used an investment case approach to develop a national hepatitis action plan for South Africa, grounded in a process of intensive engagement of local stakeholders. Costs were estimated for each activity using an ingredients-based, bottom-up costing tool designed by the authors. The health impact and cost-effectiveness of the Action Plan were assessed by simulating its four priority interventions (HBV birth dose vaccination, PMTCT, HBV treatment and HCV treatment) using previously developed models calibrated to South Africa’s demographic and epidemic profile. The Action Plan is estimated to require ZAR3.8 billion (US$294 million) over 2017–2021, about 0.5% of projected government health spending. Treatment scale-up over the initial 5-year period would avert 13?000 HBV-related and 7000 HCV-related deaths. If scale up continues beyond 2021 in line with WHO goals, more than 670?000 new infections, 200?000 HBV-related deaths, and 30?000 HCV-related deaths could be averted. The incremental cost-effectiveness of the Action Plan is estimated at $3310 per DALY averted, less than the benchmark of half of per capita GDP. Our analysis suggests that the proposed scale-up can be accommodated within South Africa’s fiscal space and represents good use of scarce resources. Discussions are ongoing in South Africa on the allocation of budget to hepatitis. Our work illustrates the value and feasibility of using an investment case approach to assess the costs and relative priority of scaling up HBV/HCV services.
机译:虽然世卫组织已经批准了肝炎的全球目标,但大多数国家尚未建立乙型肝炎和C的方案,每年占3.2亿感染和超过一百万人死亡。这种缓慢反应的一个原因是令人兴奋的令人兴奋的分析,表明国家HBV / HCV计划可能对这些流行病产生重大影响,并以具有成本效益,实惠的方式拯救生命。在这方面,我们的团队使用了一项投资案例方法来开发南非国家肝炎行动计划,这是一个集中参与当地利益攸关方的进程。使用由作者设计的基于成分的自下而上的成本计算工具,每项活动估计成本。通过模拟使用以前开发的模型校准到南非人口和流行病的模型来评估行动计划的健康影响和成本效益。估计,行动计划估计,2017 - 2017年ZAR3.8亿美元(2.94亿美元),约占预计政府卫生支出的0.5%。在最初的5年期间治疗扩大率为Avert 13?000 HBV相关和7000个与HCV相关的死亡。如果扩展超过2021年,符合世卫组织的目标,超过670 000 000 000 000多种新的感染,200 00?000 HBV相关的死亡,并且可以避免30 00 000 HCV相关的死亡。行动计划的增量成本效益估计为每达利避免的3310美元,少于人均GDP一半的基准。我们的分析表明,拟议的扩展可以容纳在南非的财政空间内,并代表良好利用稀缺资源。南非正在进行讨论,用于肝炎预算分配。我们的工作说明了使用投资案例方法来评估扩大HBV / HCV服务的成本和相对优先级的价值和可行性。

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