| Literature DB >> 28068211 |
Margaret S Coleman1, Heather M Burke1, Bethany L Welstead1, Tarissa Mitchell1, Eboni M Taylor1, Dmitry Shapovalov2, Brian A Maskery1, Heesoo Joo1, Michelle Weinberg1.
Abstract
Background On August 24, 2011, 31 US-bound refugees from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (KL) arrived in Los Angeles. One of them was diagnosed with measles post-arrival. He exposed others during a flight, and persons in the community while disembarking and seeking medical care. As a result, 9 cases of measles were identified. Methods We estimated costs of response to this outbreak and conducted a comparative cost analysis examining what might have happened had all US-bound refugees been vaccinated before leaving Malaysia. Results State-by-state costs differed and variously included vaccination, hospitalization, medical visits, and contact tracing with costs ranging from $621 to $35,115. The total of domestic and IOM Malaysia reported costs for US-bound refugees were $137,505 [range: $134,531 - $142,777 from a sensitivity analysis]. Had all US-bound refugees been vaccinated while in Malaysia, it would have cost approximately $19,646 and could have prevented 8 measles cases. Conclusion A vaccination program for US-bound refugees, supporting a complete vaccination for US-bound refugees, could improve refugees' health, reduce importations of vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States, and avert measles response activities and costs.Entities:
Keywords: cost; measles; outbreak; refugee; vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28068211 PMCID: PMC5443367 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2016.1271518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452
Cost of response to measles in refugees arriving at Los Angeles International Airport from Malaysia for each state.
| Event Costs | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost Categories | # Refugees | # Patients | # Staff | Baseline | Range [min – max] |
| Texas | 2 | 0 | 21 | $2,295 | $2,295 |
| New Hampshire | 3 | 0 | 4 | $692 | $692 |
| North Carolina | 5 | 1 | 17 | $8,847 | $8,847 |
| Maryland | 5 | 2 | 15 | $15,398 | $15,398 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 0 | 10 | $621 | $621 |
| California | 4 | 4 | 50 | $35,115 | $35,115 |
| Wisconsin | 4 | 0 | N/A | $2,108 | [$621 - $4,744] |
| Massachusetts | 4 | 0 | N/A | $2,108 | [$621 - $4,744] |
| Total | 31 | 7 | $67,184 | [$64,210-$72,456] | |
Notes:
Event costs include costs of labor, measles testing, vaccination, outpatient treatment and hospitalization.
Wisconsin and Massachusetts are assigned an average per-refugee costs of Texas, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and Oklahoma multiplied by numbers of refugees assigned to Wisconsin and Massachusetts, respectively.
One of them was the refugee index case. All other 3 cases were non-refugees.
Cost analysis of the domestic and international response to measles in refugees arriving at Los Angeles International Airport from Malaysia.
| Baseline | Range [min – max] | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic Costs | Costs of labor, measles testing, vaccination, outpatient treatment and hospitalization (a) | $67,184 | [$64,210-$72,456] |
| Malaysia Costs | Costs for rescheduling US-bound refugees for later flights, vaccinating resettling refugees, treatment of one hospitalized case, and etc. | $70,321 | $70,321 |
| Total measles event and treatment costs (a)+(b) | $137,505 | [$134,531-$142,777] | |
| Measles event and treatment costs per case: ((a)+(b))/9 cases | $15,278 | [$14,948-$15,864] | |
Notes:
Costs includes vaccination costs of 1,500 refugees reported by IOM Malaysia ($19,248).
Transportation costs for hospital visits at Kuala Lumpur were not included because the costs were out-of-pocket payments. Additional $18,564, $26 per round trip multiplied by 714 families (1,500 refugees divided by 2.1), are expected for the transportation costs. Some refugees may have made multiple trips, while some made none.
Cost of vaccination of all 1,531 refugees before measles outbreak and expected several cases prevented.
| Total Cost of vaccination (a): $12.83 | $19,646 |
| Number of measles cases prevented | 8 |
| Cost per prevented case (a/b) | $2,456 |
Notes:
Per-person cost of MMR vaccination as reported by IOM Malaysia for 1,500 (no refugee out-of-pocket costs included) was $12.83.
We assumed 93% reduction in number of cases by vaccinating all 1,531 refugees.
| | Refugees | Non-refugees |
| Domestic activities | | |
| (1) HDs response activities | ||
| HDs' labor | State and local HDs paid salaries to employees who were involved in the response activities. Refugee health coordinators may be financed mostly by the federal funding and communicable disease control efforts may be subsidized by federal grant money; however, funding sources varied by state. | |
| Measles testing | ||
| MMR vaccination | ||
| Immunoglobulin treatment | | |
| (2) Outpatient visits | Federal (RMA) or state (Medicaid) government paid outpatient or inpatient costs to hospitals. Funding sources were varied by state but all costs were covered by the US government. | Health care sectors, such as health insurances and patients, paid outpatient costs to hospitals. (The costs were excluded because of the study perspective.) |
| (3) Hospitalization | | N/A (There were no domestic non-refugee hospitalization cases associated with this measles outbreak.) |
| Activities related to the US-bound refugees in Malaysia | Federal government (Department of States) paid all response costs for US-bound refugees to IOM for delivering the all services. | N/A |
| (There were no activities for Malaysians in KL during the study period.) | ||
Notes:
HD: Health department
RMA: Refugee Medical Assistance
Data Source: Division of Global Migration and Quarantine (DGMQ) and IOM Malaysia internal data.