| Literature DB >> 28344517 |
Rajesh Kumar Sinha1, Hassan Haghparast-Bidgoli2, Prasanta Kishore Tripathy1, Nirmala Nair1, Rajkumar Gope1, Shibanand Rath1, Audrey Prost2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neonatal mortality remains unacceptably high in many low and middle-income countries, including India. A community mobilisation intervention using participatory learning and action with women's groups facilitated by Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) was conducted to improve maternal and newborn health. The intervention was evaluated through a cluster-randomised controlled trial conducted in Jharkhand and Odisha, eastern India. This aims to assess the cost-effectiveness this intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Cluster randomised controlled trial; Cost-effectiveness; Neonatal mortality; Participatory learning and action; Women’s groups
Year: 2017 PMID: 28344517 PMCID: PMC5361856 DOI: 10.1186/s12962-017-0064-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Description of cost items and their categorisation
| Cost categories | Description |
|---|---|
| Start-up costs | Identification and initial discussions with ASHAs; trainings with ASHAs; hiring support staff for women’s group intervention and monitoring staff; setting up the monitoring system; training of monitoring team; initial contacts with community members; printing picture cards; setting up the accounting system to collect cost data |
| Women’s groups costs | Incentives to 137 ASHAs for conducting women’s groups meetings; incentives paid to 15 co-facilitators who supported ASHAs in mobilising women and keeping records of the meetings; supervision costs for the women’s group intervention paid to five supervisors; time and other resource costs like transport and communication of staff members who supported the women’s group intervention |
| VHSNC strengthening costs | Incentives paid to five facilitators who conducted meetings with VHSNCs; supervision cost of VHSNC strengthening works paid to one supervisor for his time including other resource costs like transport, communication etc. and other costs required to support VHSNC strengthening works |
| Research costs | Incentives paid to community identifiers to collect information about births and newborn deaths in their catchment areas, incentives paid to 30 monitoring staff members who collected data on births and neonatal deaths; supervision cost of data collection work and quality checks paid to five supervisors, incentives paid to Data Inputters and Data Manager, time and other resource costs like transport, communication for other staff members who supported quantitative and qualitative data collection, data management and data analysis |
| Joint costs | Costs related to general administration, incentives paid and other related costs for accounting and administrative staff, time and resources of all staff involved in general administrative works, office rents, utility charges, maintenance cost, postage, general printing costs, bank charges against remittances, incentives paid for office assistance, security guards |
Variables and values used in the sensitivity analyses
| Variable | Lower limit | Base-case scenario | Upper limit | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Changing discount rate (base case 3% both costs and outcomes) | WHO guide to cost-effectiveness analysis. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2003. | |||
| Costs 0%, life-years 0% | 3% | Costs 6%, life-years 3% | ||
| Exchange rate (USD to INR) | 50 | 68.07 | Observed variation during the trial period | |
| Number of neo-natal deaths averted | 18 | 50 | 76 | The upper and lower limits of the 95% confidence interval of odds ratio of reduction in neo-natal mortality |
| Life-expectancy at birth (years) | 68.5a | 86 | Consistent with standard practice in economic assessment to take standard expected life expectancy. GBD-2010 | |
a Life expectancy at birth 2016 in India (http://www.indexmundi.com/india/life_expectancy_at_birth.html)
Overview of intervention cost
| Women’s groups | Women’s groups and VHSNC strengthening | |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated population in the intervention | 76,499 | |
| Estimated number of live births in the intervention area | 3603 | |
| Total cost (INR) | 8,660,561 | 10,368,255 |
| Total cost (USD) | 127,230 | 152,318 |
| Average intervention cost per newborn child (USD) | 35.31 | 42.28 |
| Average intervention cost per person (USD) | 1.66 | 1.99 |
| Cost/women’s group meeting (USD) (33 meetings were conducted with each women’s group of total 161 groups) | 24 | |
| Cost per women’s group (USD) (161 women’s groups in the intervention clusters) | 790 |
INR Indian rupees, USD US dollar
Estimate of neo-natal deaths averted
| Intervention arm | Control arm | |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated number of live births in the intervention area | 3603 | 3439 |
| Neo-natal mortality rate (per 1000 live births) | 30 | 44 |
| Estimated neo-natal deaths (after taking estimated live births of intervention and control areas) | 108 | 151 |
| Estimated neo-natal deaths in the control area after taking same number of live births as in the intervention area | 158 | |
| Neo-natal deaths averted (158 minus 108) in the intervention area | 50 | |
Overview of cost-effectiveness results
| Women’s groups | Women’s groups and VHSNC strengthening | |
|---|---|---|
| Total cost (INR) | 8,660,561 | 10,368,255 |
| Total cost (USD) | 127,230 | 152,318 |
| Newborn deaths (ND) averted (difference in number of neonatal deaths between intervention and control areas) | 50 | |
| Life year saved per death averted | 30.81 | |
| Total life year saved or DALY averted | 1541 | |
| Cost per neonatal death averted (USD) | 2545 | 3046 |
| Cost/DALY averted (USD) | 83 | 99 |
INR Indian rupees, USD US dollar
Results of sensitivity analyses
| Cost/DALY averted in women’s group intervention (cost/DALY averted including VHSNC strengthening activities)-in USD | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Lower limit | Base-case scenario | Upper limit | |
| Changing discount rate (base case 3% both costs and outcomes) | |||
| Costs 0%, life-years 0% | 25 (30) | 83 (99) | |
| Costs 6%, life-years 3% | 98 (118) | ||
| Exchange rate | 134 (160) | – | |
| Life expectancy at birth | 104 (125) | – | |
| Number of neonatal death averted | 273 (326) | 65 (77) | |
Scale up cost of ASHA facilitated PLA women’s group intervention across India.
Source: CBGA (February 2017): what do the number tell? An analysis of Union Budget 2017–2018
| Particulars | Amount (INR) per ASHA/ASHA facilitator | Total amount (INR in crores) for nine hundred thousand ASHAs |
|---|---|---|
| Training on PLA facilitation to ASHA facilitators (as 20 ASHAs are supervised by one ASHA facilitator, around 45,000 ASHA facilitators will be trained on different phases of PLA for 10 days at the rate of INR 1000 per day. These ASHA facilitators will provide support to nine hundred thousand ASHAs to conduct PLA with women’s groups) | 10,000 | 45 |
| Printing of PLA modules for ASHAs | 500 | 45 |
| Printing of picture cards for ASHAs (for each ASHA, 20 picture cards @ INR 10 per card will be printed) | 200 | 18 |
| Incentives to ASHAs for facilitating PLA meetings with women’s groups (Each ASHA will conduct 20 meetings with women’s group and will be incentivised @ INR 150 per meeting) | 3000 | 270 |
| Total budgetary outlay for scaling up ASHA facilitated PLA with women’s groups across India | 378 | |
| Total budgetary allocation in health in India during the year 2017–2018 (% of total budgetary outlay for scaling up ASHA facilitated women’s group to total health budget during the year 2017–2018) | 48,852.5 (0.77%) | |
| Total budgetary outlay for NHM in India during the year 2017–2018 (% of total budgetary outlay for scaling up ASHA facilitated women’s group to total NHM budget during the year 2017–2018) | 27,131.2 (1.39%) | |