| Literature DB >> 22475679 |
Anni-Maria Pulkki-Brännström1, Claudia Wolff, Niklas Brännström, Jolene Skordis-Worrall.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization recommends that national malaria programmes universally distribute long-lasting insecticide-treated bed nets (LLINs). LLINs provide effective insecticide protection for at least three years while conventional nets must be retreated every 6-12 months. LLINs may also promise longer physical durability (lifespan), but at a higher unit price. No prospective data currently available is sufficient to calculate the comparative cost effectiveness of different net types. We thus constructed a model to explore the cost effectiveness of LLINs, asking how a longer lifespan affects the relative cost effectiveness of nets, and if, when and why LLINs might be preferred to conventional insecticide-treated nets. An innovation of our model is that we also considered the replenishment need i.e. loss of nets over time.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22475679 PMCID: PMC3348006 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-10-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Base case and sensitivity analysis values and sources
| Variable | Base case | Sensitivity analysis | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5.5 all-cause deaths are prevented per 1000 under-5 s protected every year | - | [ | |
| 1 million nets distributed to 4 million people, 20% aged under 5 | - | - | |
| 50% overall | 30% overall and 50% under-5 s; | See Methods - Programme effect | |
| USD 4 | USD 3 - USD 7 (LLINs) | [ | |
| 3 years | 3 - 5 years (LLINs) 1-4 years (conventional nets) | [ | |
| USD 1.4 per net | USD 3.86 per net | See Table 2 | |
| 75% of nets are treated annually for USD 0.64 per net | 50% treated annually or 75% treated biannually for USD 1.28 per net | See Table 3 | |
| No replenishment need | Increasing/constant/decreasing proportion of nets is lost each year. | See Methods -Replenishment | |
| - | USD 1.4 or USD 3.86 per net | See Table 2 | |
Delivery cost estimates
| Delivery method | Delivery cost per net (average and range; USD 2009) | Country and source |
|---|---|---|
| 2.73 (0.7, 9.0) | Uganda* (separate data for two districts) [ | |
| 2.65 (1.66, 3.95) | Burkina Faso [ | |
| 1.40 (0.78, 1.81) | Malawi† and Togo [ | |
| 3.86 (1.34, 7.87) | Tanzania†† [ | |
Notes to Table 2. Studies that reported financial costs only e.g. [22,62] were excluded.
* For Uganda, [4] report costs for two delivery channels in two districts: campaign delivery in both districts, and delivery through antenatal care in one district.
† The Malawi programme relied more heavily on sales in the early years and routine service delivery later on. We classify Stevens et al. [50] as sales but Yukich et al. [14] as integrated delivery because the latter include two additional years of data.
†† For Tanzania we use different sources for different programmes: Yukich et al. [14] for SMARTNET, Mulligan et al. [47] for TNVS, and Hanson et al. [39] for KINET.
Insecticide retreatment cost estimates
| Scale | Retreatment frequency | Cost of insecticide per retreatment kit (USD 2009) | Total cost per retreatment (USD 2009) | Country and source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biannual | 0.21 | 0.78 | Kenya [ | |
| Biannual | 0.69 | 0.87 | Ghana [ | |
| Continuous sales | 1.67 | - | Tanzania† [ | |
| Initial impregnation only | 0.32 | - | India [ | |
| Annual | 0.67 | - | Malawi†† [ | |
| Annual | 0.23 | - | Eritrea [ | |
| Continuous sales | 2.05 | - | Senegal [ | |
| Continuous sales | 0.61 | - | Tanzania† [ | |
| Biannual | 0.80 (1.16 for kits actually used) | - | Tanzania† [ | |
Notes to Table 3. † For Tanzania we use different sources for different programmes: Yukich et al. [14] for SMARTNET, Mulligan et al. [47] for TNVS, and Hanson et al. [39] for KINET.
†† We use Yukich et al. [14] rather than Stevens et al. [50] because the former include two additional years of data.
Figure 1Equally cost effective bed nets of different price, lifespan and type. Each bed net choice is as cost effective as the base case, the 3-year LLIN priced at USD 4. Programme cost is USD 1.71 per net delivered (and retreated) per annum, USD 0.85-0.86 per person (USD 3.05-3.06 per under-5) protected per annum, USD 554-556 per under-5 death averted and USD 16.8-16.9 per DALY averted.
Figure 2Relationship between usage rate and programme cost effectiveness when programme cost is constant. The figure illustrates how cost effectiveness changes depending on how frequently nets are used. The base case is 50% usage among the general population and 70% among under 5s, which gives LLIN cost effectiveness as USD 0.86 per person protected and USD 3.06 per under-5 protected. If conventional nets are used instead (with the same physical lifespan and purchase price and base case assumptions about retreatment), cost effectiveness is USD 1.16 per person protected. A higher usage rate implies a lower cost per person protected.
Impact of replenishment on LLIN programme cost and cost effectiveness
| Result | Lifespan | Scenario 1: S-shaped loss rate | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 years | 717,000 | 300,00 | 600,000 | |
| 4 years | 644,600 | 350,000 | 700,000 | |
| 3 years | USD 4.47 m (USD 906,000) | USD 1.87 m (USD 382,000) | USD 3.75 m (USD 767,000) | |
| 4 years | USD 4.32 m (USD 816,000) | USD 2.17 m (USD 443,000) | USD 4.34 m (USD 886,000) | |
| 3 years | +26% | +11% | +22% | |
| 4 years | +33% | +17% | +33% | |
| 3 years | 2780 more deaths averted (+9.9%) | 1386 more deaths averted (+4.7%) | 2680 more deaths averted (+9.5%) | |
| 4 years | 3087 more deaths averted (+11%) | 2002 more deaths averted (+7.0%) | 3764 more deaths averted (+14%) | |
| 3 years | USD 701 (611) | USD 617 (582) | USD 678 (609) | |
| 4 years | USD 567 (474) | USD 497 (456) | USD 568 (486) | |
| 3 years | USD 1609 (25) | USD 1353 (21) | USD 1399 (22) | |
| 4 years | USD 1400 (22) | USD 1085 (17) | USD 1154 (18) | |
Notes to Table 4: All nets are LLINs priced at USD 4 each. Other variables take values specified in the base case model (Table 1).