| Literature DB >> 27123188 |
Nathalie Largeron1, Pierre Lévy2, Jürgen Wasem3, Xavier Bresse1.
Abstract
The use of vaccines to prevent diseases in children, adults, and the elderly results in fewer medical visits, diagnostic tests, treatments, and hospitalisations, which leads to substantial savings in healthcare costs each year in Europe and elsewhere. Vaccines also contribute to reducing resource utilisation by preventing nosocomial infections, such as rotavirus gastroenteritis, which can increase hospital stays by 4-12 days. Vaccination also has an important role in the prevention of cancers with, for example, human papillomavirus or hepatitis B vaccines. Since the financial impact of cancer is high for patients, healthcare systems, and society as a whole, any cases prevented will reduce this impact. Newer vaccines, such as the herpes zoster vaccine, can provide an answer to unmet medical needs by preventing and reducing the severity of shingles and associated post-herpetic neuralgia, which are difficult conditions to treat. Thus, in the context of increasing pressure on healthcare budgets, vaccination can contribute to the sustainability of healthcare systems through reduced and more efficient use of healthcare resources.Entities:
Keywords: cancers; costs; healthcare resource use; nosocomial infections; vaccination
Year: 2015 PMID: 27123188 PMCID: PMC4802702 DOI: 10.3402/jmahp.v3.27043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mark Access Health Policy ISSN: 2001-6689
Estimated human and economic burden in Europe of some new preventable diseases
| Annual burden before vaccine introduction | Cost per case | |
|---|---|---|
| Rotavirus gastroenteritis | In Europe in children <5 years ( | Societal perspective (including direct medical, direct non-medical, and indirect costs) in 2004–2005 in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, and UK ( |
| Meningitis C | In the UK: 955 cases in 1998 ( | In the UK: £8,413 per case ( |
| Invasive pneumococcal diseases (meningitis and pneumonia) | In the UK: | In the UK: |
| External genital warts | In Europe: 600,000 new cases ( | In France: €483 per case (payer perspective) |
| HPV-related cancers | In Europe: ( | In the UK: |
| Zoster | In Europe: 1.7 new cases ( | In Germany: €388 to €729 per case (payer perspective) ( |
Fig. 1Incidence and total costs of four major adults vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States (2013).
Fig. 2Estimated costs of HPV-associated cancers in France, payer perspective.