| Literature DB >> 25786225 |
Eduardo A Undurraga1, Miguel Betancourt-Cravioto2, José Ramos-Castañeda3, Ruth Martínez-Vega4, Jorge Méndez-Galván5, Duane J Gubler6, María G Guzmán7, Scott B Halstead8, Eva Harris9, Pablo Kuri-Morales10, Roberto Tapia-Conyer2, Donald S Shepard1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dengue imposes a substantial economic and disease burden in most tropical and subtropical countries. Dengue incidence and severity have dramatically increased in Mexico during the past decades. Having objective and comparable estimates of the economic burden of dengue is essential to inform health policy, increase disease awareness, and assess the impact of dengue prevention and control technologies. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25786225 PMCID: PMC4364886 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Age distribution of reported dengue episodes, 2010–2011.
Notes: The graph shows the percentage of reported episodes in each 10-year age category, from 0–9 through 90–99, using the midpoint of each category.
Main results from the prospective cohort study in Morelos, Mexico 2011–2012.
| Town | Participants | Total | Symptom. | Visited | Public facility | Private facility only | ||||
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| (n) | infections | infection | a facility | Rep. | Not rep. | Total | Rep. | Not rep. | Total | |
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| Ambulatory | 11 | 3 | 6 | 9 | 0 | 2 | 2 | |||
| Hospitalized | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
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| Ambulatory | 36 | 12 | 14 | 26 | 0 | 10 | 10 | |||
| Hospitalized | 4 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
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| Ambulatory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| Hospitalized | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
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| Ambulatory | 12 | 1 | 6 | 7 | 0 | 5 | 5 | |||
| Hospitalized | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
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Notes: Rep. denotes case reported through the surveillance system. Subtotals by municipality are italicized.
a Includes patients who only visited public healthcare sites and who visited both private and public sites.
b For one person we do not know whether she/he visited a health facility.
Summary expansion factors (EF) for symptomatic DENV infections, based on the Morelos prospective cohort study (2011–2012).
| Setting | Dengue patients who visited a health facility | All symptomatic DENV infections |
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| Ambulatory | 3.7 | 5.6 |
| Hospitalized | 1.4 | 2.0 |
| Total | 3.1 | 4.7 |
Notes: Rep. denotes case reported through the surveillance system. DENV denotes dengue virus. Expansion factors weighted by total episodes in each category.
Summary of direct medical unit costs (2012 US dollars) derived using macro-costing with data from two tertiary hospitals in Tabasco.
| Row | Item | Source | Hospital 1 | Hospital 2 |
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| (1) | Number of registered beds (official) | Reported by hospital |
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| (2) | Average occupancy rate | Reported by hospital |
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| (3) | Occupied beds |
| 148 | 137 |
| (4) | Annual bed-days |
| 54,002 | 50,152 |
| (5) | Total ambulatory visits | Reported by hospital |
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| (6) | Relative cost: outpatient visit/inpatient day | Shepard et al.[ | 0.32 | 0.32 |
| (7) | Ambulatory bed-day equivalents |
| 35,076 | 42,903 |
| (8) | Total bed-day equivalents |
| 89,078 | 93,055 |
| (9) | Total hospital operating expenditures, $ | Reported by hospital |
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| (10) | Cost per bed-day equivalent, $ |
| 275.36 | 311.44 |
| (11) | Cost per ambulatory visit, $ |
| 88.12 | 99.66 |
| (12) | GNP per capita, $ | World Bank | 10,064 | 10,064 |
| (13) | Bed-day as share of GNP per capita | (10) / (12) |
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Notes: The numbers in italics were reported by the hospitals. Costs correspond to year 2011 and were adjusted to 2012 US dollars, using gross domestic product (GDP) deflators [58]. Operating expenditures include personnel costs, administrative services and equipment, drugs, exams and other medical supplies, maintenance and new medical equipment, maintenance and acquisition of vehicles and buildings, and utilities. GNP denotes gross national product.
Estimation of direct medical unit costs (2012 US dollars) per bed-day and outpatient visit to a public hospital.
| Item and type of hospital | Distribution of cases (%) | Ratio of cost to tertiary hospital | Unit costs per type of facility | Best estimate, unit costs |
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| $ 240.04 | |||
| Primary-level hospital | 65% | 0.74 | $ 230.54 | |
| Secondary-level hospital | 26% | 0.77 | $ 240.52 | |
| Tertiary-level hospital | 9% | 1.00 | $ 311.01 | |
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| $ 65.53 | |||
| Homecare or pharmacy | 30% | 0.17 | $ 17.23 | |
| Health center (no beds) | 19% | 0.68 | $ 67.87 | |
| Primary-level hospital | 13% | 0.84 | $ 83.82 | |
| Secondary-level hospital | 27% | 0.96 | $ 95.50 | |
| Tertiary-level hospital | 11% | 1.00 | $ 99.52 |
Notes: a The ratio between the costs of each type of hospital compared to a tertiary hospital in Mexico was derived from the WHO-Choice estimates for Mexico [67].
The distribution of dengue episodes by type of setting was estimated as proportional to the number of beds by setting for hospitalized cases based on MoH health statistics [66].
For ambulatory visits, we obtained the distribution and costs of dengue episodes by type of setting combining data from the Morelos cohort study, hospital questionnaires, expert opinion, WHO estimates, and MoH data. The share of patients that did not seek healthcare (30%) was obtained from interviews in the Morelos cohort study. This estimate is consistent with a 70% probability of using paid or unpaid healthcare services in Mexico obtained by Dávila and Guijarro (2000) [70] using the National Household Income and Expenditure Survey. Patients who sought care were distributed by type of facility based on average annual outpatients visits [68], and WHO-CHOICE estimates [67].
Summary of the parameters varied simultaneously in the sensitivity analysis, assumed probability distributions, and data sources.
| Item | Units | Estimate | Distribution | Statistics | Value | Source |
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| Hospitalized | EFH | 2.0 | PERT | (Min; Best; Max) | (1.0; 2.0; 3.3) | Morelos cohort, Shepard et al.[ |
| Ambulatory | EFA | 5.6 | PERT | (Min; Best; Max) | (5.0; 5.6; 15.0) | Morelos cohort, Shepard et al.[ |
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| Hospitalized | $ | 238.91 | PERT | (Min; Best; Max) | (229.5; 238.9; 309.5) | Macro-costing, WHO [ |
| Ambulatory | $ | 65.25 | PERT | (Min; Best; Max) | (17.23; 65.3; 99.1) | Macro-costing, WHO [ |
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| Hospitalized-adults | $ | 25.16 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (25.2; 7.0) | Patient interviews |
| Ambulatory-adults | $ | 11.96 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (12.0; 8.3) | Patient interviews |
| Hospitalized-children | $ | 27.85 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (27.8; 6.4) | Patient interviews |
| Ambulatory-children | $ | 9.09 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (9.1; 2.0) | Patient interviews |
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| Hospitalized | Days | 13.9 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (13.9; 5.3) | MoH surveillance, Suaya et al.[ |
| Ambulatory | Days | 12.3 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (12.3; 5.4) | MoH surveillance, Suaya et al.[ |
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| Hospitalized | Days | 3.5 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (3.5; 4.3) | MoH surveillance |
| Amb. (pre-hospital, adult) | Days | 2.4 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (2.4; 1.1) | Patient interviews |
| Amb. (pre-hospital, child) | Days | 3.7 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (3.7; 2.5) | Patient interviews |
| Ambulatory | Days | 3.9 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (3.9; 2.1) | Suaya et al.[ |
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| Hospitalized, school loss | Days | 6.2 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (6.2; 4.2) | Suaya et al.[ |
| Ambulatory, school loss | Days | 4.4 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (4.4; 3.3) | Suaya et al.[ |
| Hospitalized, work loss | Days | 9.8 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (9.8; 4.3) | Suaya et al.[ |
| Ambulatory, work loss | Days | 5.4 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (5.4; 4.3) | Suaya et al.[ |
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| Hospitalized, school loss | Days | 3.7 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (3.7; 4.5) | Suaya et al.[ |
| Ambulatory, school loss | Days | 2.2 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (2.2; 3.5) | Suaya et al.[ |
| Hospitalized, work loss | Days | 6.1 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (6.1; 6.6) | Suaya et al.[ |
| Ambulatory, work loss | Days | 3.8 | Normal | (μ, σ) | (3.8; 5.3) | Suaya et al.[ |
Notes: Normal distributions for medical expenditures and days lost were lower-truncated at zero. PERT (min, best, max, λ) with λ = 4. EF denotes expansion factor, WHO denotes World Health Organization, MoH denotes Ministry of Health. Simple average from countries from the Americas included in Suaya et al. [46] (Brazil, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, and Venezuela).
Total symptomatic DENV infections reported by the Ministry of Health and estimated episodes using expansion factors from the Morelos cohort study.
| 2010 | 2011 | |||||||
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| Data | DF | DHF | Deaths | Total | DF | DHF | Deaths | Total |
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| Hospital | 3,454 | 6,224 | 9,760 | 3,092 | 5,723 | 8,992 | ||
| Ambulatory | 29,396 | 2,200 | 31,574 | 11,063 | 654 | 11,556 | ||
| Total | 32,850 | 8,424 | 62 | 41,333 | 14,154 | 6,377 | 55 | 20,548 |
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| Hospital | 7,014 | 12,639 | 19,820 | 6,278 | 11,623 | 18,261 | ||
| (95%CL) | (12,591–28,282) | (11,600–26,057) | ||||||
| Ambulatory | 163,231 | 12,216 | 175,325 | 61,430 | 3,632 | 64,168 | ||
| (95%CL) | (161,389–334,776) | (59,068–122,527) | ||||||
| Total | 170,245 | 24,854 | 126 | 195,145 | 67,708 | 15,255 | 112 | 82,429 |
| (95%CL) | (80–180) | (180,459–355,343) | (71–159) | (75,203–142,041) | ||||
Notes: Estimated cases from the Mexican Ministry of Health (MoH) include all lab-confirmed cases plus the share of positive cases from the laboratory diagnosed samples multiplied by the probable cases reported (probable dengue are suspected episodes of dengue with specific clinical symptoms). 95%CL denotes a 95% certainty level for each estimate, obtained through Monte Carlo simulations using the probability distributions shown in Table 5. These numbers in parentheses indicate the region of uncertainty around base-case estimates. DENV denotes dengue virus, DF denotes dengue fever, DHF denotes dengue hemorrhagic fever, EF denotes expansion factor, CL denotes certainty level.
In year 2011, 13.7% of the DF episodes and 3.1% of the DHF episodes reported by the MoH were not classified as ambulatory or hospitalized cases in the data. We assigned these patients to hospitalized or ambulatory treatments based on the proportion of patients by treatment in 2010.
Economic burden for adjusted dengue episodes in Mexico (2012 US dollars), 2010–2011.
| 2010 | 2011 | Average 2010–2011 | ||||
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| Cost (millions) | Per capita | Cost (millions) | Per capita | Cost (millions) | Per capita | |
| Hospitalized | $26.39 | $0.24 | $24.15 | $0.22 | $25.27 | $0.23 |
| (95% CL) | (14.28–82.41) | (0.13–0.76) | (13.02–75.59) | (0.12–0.69) | (13.63–78.98) | (0.13–0.73) |
| Ambulatory | $78.93 | $0.73 | $28.96 | $0.27 | $53.95 | $0.50 |
| (95% CL) | (50.17–226.87) | (0.46–2.09) | (18.44–83.31) | (0.17–0.76) | (34.28–155.15) | (0.32–1.43) |
| Fatal | $7.82 | $0.07 | $7.32 | $0.07 | $7.57 | $0.07 |
| (95% CL) | (4.91–11.23) | (0.05–0.10) | (4.60–10.51) | (0.04–0.10) | (4.75–10.87) | (0.04–0.10) |
| Surv. & vector control | $77.3 | $0.71 | $88.54 | $0.81 | $82.92 | $0.76 |
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Notes: 95% CL denotes a 95% certainty level for each estimate, obtained through Monte Carlo simulations using the probability distributions shown in Table 5. These numbers in parentheses indicate the region of uncertainty around base-case estimates. Surv. & vector control denotes the costs of surveillance and vector control based on the Ministry of Health annual budget.
Fig 2Distribution of the economic burden of dengue in Mexico by component, 2010–2011.
Notes: Costs were adjusted to 2012 US dollars, using gross domestic product (GDP) deflators. [58] *Due to limited availability of data, vector control and surveillance costs for the year 2011 were estimated based on the average annual budget allocated by the Mexican Ministry of Health from the previous two years (2009 and 2010).
Fig 3Variation in total economic burden of dengue based on listed parameters included in the sensitivity analysis (average for years 2010 and 2011).
Notes: The vertical line shows the point estimate for the average total economic burden of dengue ($170 million). The variation for each parameter corresponds to the 95% certainty level obtained through the computation of 10,000 Monte Carlo simulations for each parameter, and for the simultaneous variation of all parameters (bar at the top). A summary of the main parameters, assumed distributions and data sources are shown in Table 5.
Dengue disease burden estimates in Mexico per million population.
| 2010 | 2011 | Average | |
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| YLL | 22.3 | 20.8 | 21.5 |
| YLD—ambulatory | 54.3 | 19.5 | 36.9 |
| YLD—hospitalized | 6.9 | 6.4 | 6.7 |
| DALYs | 83.5 | 46.7 | 65.1 |
| (95%CL) | (41.8–131.9) | (29.4–66.3) | (36.0–98.7) |
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| YLL | 49.1 | 45.7 | 47.4 |
| YLD—ambulatory | 44.3 | 16.1 | 30.2 |
| YLD—hospitalized | 5.7 | 5.2 | 5.4 |
| DALYs | 99.0 | 67.0 | 83.0 |
| (95%CL) | (60.2–142.9) | (45.4–91.7) | (53.2–116.6) |
Notes: YLL denotes Years of Life Lost, YLD denotes Years Lost due to Disability, and DALYs denote Disability-Adjusted Life-Years. The WHO method refers to the original definition of DALYs proposed by Murray et al. in 1994 [55,56], and used subsequently for most burden of disease estimates. The parameters used (age weights, disability weight, and discount rate) were based on previous studies, for comparability [44,52,91]. The GBD 2010 method refers to an updated definition of DALYs used in the Global Burden of Disease (GBD 2010 study) [16], where age weighting and time discounting were dropped from the disease burden estimates. 95% CL denotes a 95% certainty level for each estimate, obtained through Monte Carlo simulations using the probability distributions shown in Table 5. These numbers in parentheses indicate the region of uncertainty around base-case estimates. WHO denotes World Health Organization, YLL denotes years of life lost, YLD denotes years lived with disability, DALY denotes disability adjusted life-years, CL denotes certainty level.
Fig 4Estimated symptomatic and fatal dengue episodes and economic and disease burden, 1995–2011.
Notes: Estimated numbers of dengue episodes are based on refined surveillance data using expansion factors from the Morelos prospective cohort study.a Cost estimates correspond to the average annual economic burden per capita for dengue illness and death (in 2012 US dollars) and do not include surveillance and vector control costs.b Disability adjusted life years (DALYs) are per million population.c Average number of cases of symptomatic dengue infection reported to the Ministry of Health (not adjusted for underreporting).