| Literature DB >> 25691915 |
Lisa M Gargano1, Jacqueline E Tate2, Umesh D Parashar2, Saad B Omer3, Susan T Cookson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A humanitarian emergency involves a complete breakdown of authority that often disrupts routine health care delivery, including immunization. Diarrheal diseases are a principal cause of morbidity and mortality among children during humanitarian emergencies. The objective of this study was to assess if vaccination against rotavirus, the most common cause of severe diarrhea among children, either as an addition to routine immunization program (RI) or supplemental immunization activity (SIA) would be cost-effective during a humanitarian emergency to decrease diarrhea morbidity and mortality, using Somalia as a case study.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Humanitarian emergency; Rotavirus vaccine; Routine immunization; Somalia
Year: 2015 PMID: 25691915 PMCID: PMC4331177 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-015-0032-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Principle base-case values, sensitivity ranges, and references for model inputs for estimating cost-effectiveness of a rotavirus vaccination campaign in Somalia
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| 2012 Birth cohort | 424,594 | NA | [ |
| Diarrhea disease 2-week incidence, % | 21 | 15.75-26.25 (+/− 25%) | [ |
| Diarrhea cases, severea, % | 6 | NA | [ |
| Diarrhea cases, moderatea, % | 42 | NA | [ |
| Diarrhea cases, milda, % | 52 | NA | [ |
| Rotavirus incidence severeb, % | 48 | NA | [ |
| Rotavirus incidence moderatec, % | 35 | NA | [ |
| Rotavirus incidence mild/subclinicald, % | 17 | NA | [ |
| Receive care, % | 25 | 18.75-31.25 (+/−25%) | [ |
| Mortality associated with Rotavirus (per 1,000) | 9.1 | 4.55-13.65 (+/− 50%) | [ |
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| Proportion eligible for vaccination at SIA, % | 50 | NA | Assumption |
| SIA coverage, % | 60 | 45-75 (+/−25%) | [ |
| RI coverage, % | 47 | 35.25-58.75 (+/− 25%) | [ |
| Vaccine effectiveness, % | |||
| Death | 50 | 37.5-62.5 (+/−25%) | [ |
| Severe | 50 | 37.5-62.5 (+/−25%) | [ |
| Moderate | 40 | 30-50 (+/−25%) | [ |
| Mild/subclinical | 30 | 22.5-37.5 (+/−25%) | Assumption |
| Length of hospital stay severe, days | 4 | NA | [ |
| Length of hospital stay moderate, days | 2 | NA | [ |
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| Gavi price per dose | 0.15 | NA | [ |
| SIA operational cost per child | 3.00 | 1.00-4.00 | Personal communication |
| RI operational costs per child | 0.34 | 0.05-1.00 | [ |
| Cost per day of care | 1.01 | NA | [ |
aof all diarrhea.
bof severe diarrhea cases.
cof moderate diarrhea cases.
dof mild diarrhea cases.
Rotavirus-related events or costs with and without rotavirus vaccine and averted outcomes with vaccination, (lower limit, upper limit)
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| Deaths | 3,864 | 2,956 (1,478-4,434) | 908 (454–1,362) | 23.5 | 3,504 (1,752-5,257) | 359 (180–539) | 9.3 |
| Cases | 606,917 | 499,251 (374,438-624,064) | 107,665 (80,749-134,582) | 17.7 | 564,309 (423,232-705,386) | 42,608 (31,956-53,260) | 7.0 |
| Receive care | 100,961 | 81,203 (60,902-101,504) | 19,758 (14,818-24,697) | 19.6 | 93,142 (69,857-116,428) | 7,819 (5,864-9,774) | 7.7 |
| Number of DALYs | 197,683 | 151,308 (76,236-226,381) | 46,375 (23,313-69,437) | 23.5 | 179,331 (90,323-268,338) | 18,353 (9,226-27,479) | 9.3 |
| DALYs averted per 1000 children | 109 (55–163) | 43 (22–65) | |||||
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| 322,618 | 258,825 (194,119-323,532) | 63,793 (36,067-79,741) | 19.8 | 297,372 (223,029-371,716) | 25,246 (18,934-31,557) | 7.8 |
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| -- | 309,458 (126,309-726,279) | -- | -- | 715,713 (261,292-942,923) | -- | -- |
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| -- | 568,283 (385,135-985,104) | -- | -- | 1,013,085 (558,664-1,240,295) | -- | -- |
Cost-effectiveness of rotavirus vaccine, (lower limit, upper limit)
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| Cost per DALY averted | 5.30 (1.35-14.28) | 37.62 (12.86-74.93) |
| Cost per case averted | 2.81 (0.58-6.15) | 16.20 (5.54-21.54) |
| Cost per death averted | 270.56 (68.85-729.62) | 1,921.52 (656.90-2,553.83) |
Figure 1Tornado diagrams of univariate sensitivity analysis of rotavirus vaccination campaign. (A) Sensitivity analysis for RI and (B) Sensitivity analysis for SIA.