| Literature DB >> 29242750 |
Edith Patouillard1,2,3, Jamie Griffin4, Samir Bhatt5, Azra Ghani5, Richard Cibulskis1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Access to malaria control interventions falls short of universal health coverage. The Global Technical Strategy for malaria targets at least 90% reduction in case incidence and mortality rates, and elimination in 35 countries by 2030. The potential to reach these targets will be determined in part by investments in malaria. This study estimates the financing required for malaria control and elimination over the 2016-2030 period.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29242750 PMCID: PMC5584487 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Description of scenarios
| Scenario | Intervention | Baseline | 2020 coverage targets | 2025 coverage targets | 2030 coverage targets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Sustain | All | Maintain coverage of all interventions at 2011–2013 levels | |||
| 2. Accelerate | Vector control | Means of 2011–2013 country-specific coverage | 80% with LLIN replaced every 3 years | 90% with LLIN replaced every 2 years | Maintain coverage |
| Other measures | 10% additional coverage with complementary control measures for resistance management | ||||
| SMC | 0% | 80% | 95% | Maintain | |
| IPTp | 0% | 80% | 90% | Maintain | |
| Blood tests, using RDTs or microscopy | 20% | 90% | |||
| 10% G6PD testing | 90% | ||||
| Treatment of uncomplicated cases | 2013 country-specific coverage | 90% at public facilities, 50% in communities | . | 75% community based treatment | |
| Treatment of severe cases | 100% hospitalised cases treated with quinine | 100% hospitalised cases treated with injectable artesunate | 50% severe cases with rectal artesunate in communities | 75% severe cases with rectal artesunate in communities | |
The 2011–2013 levels were assumed until 2015 and were then scaled up; vector control modelled as LLIN.
LLIN, long-lasting insecticidal treated nets; IRS, indoor residual spraying; LSM, larval source management; SMC, seasonal malaria chemoprevention; IPTp, intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnant women; RDT, rapid diagnostic test; G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency.
Surveillance assumptions over the malaria control-elimination spectrum
| Surveillance activities | Coverage rate | Stratification criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Epidemiological and entomological surveillance | 100% of population at risk | All areas |
| Operational research | 1 household and 1 health facility malaria survey modules every 3–5 years | All areas |
| Case/foci investigation and classification activities | 15% of cases | 4≤API<5 |
| 30% of cases | 3≤API<4 | |
| 50% of cases | 2≤API<3 | |
| 70% of cases | 1≤API<2 | |
| 90% of cases | 0.5≤API<1 | |
| 100% of cases | 0.5<API | |
| Proactive case detection | 10% of population at risk | 0.5≤API<1 |
| 5% of population at risk | 0.5<API |
API, annual parasite incidence.
Median cost parameters and assumed distribution for probability sensitivity analysis, by intervention (constant 2014 US$)
| Interventions | Median (IQR) | Distribution for probabilistic sensitivity analysis | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Procurement price, per net | $3.72 ($1.50) | γ | |
| Freight and insurance mark-up | 20% (20%) | γ | |
| In-country delivery mark-up | 48% (20%) | γ | |
| Estimated average total cost per person protected per year | $4.24 ($2.25) | γ | |
| Procurement price per dose of 3 SP tablets | $0.17 ($0.20) | γ | |
| In-country delivery mark-up | 15% (20%) | γ | |
| Patient delivery cost per dose of 3 tablets | $0.44 ($0.20) | γ | |
| Number of doses | 4 | Point estimate | Key informant interview |
| Procurement cost per SP+amodiaquine course | $1.44 ($1.50) | γ | |
| In-country delivery mark-up through public facility, outreach clinics and village health workers | 70% (20%) | γ | |
| Number of rounds | 3 | Point estimate | Key informant interview |
| Procurement cost per rapid diagnostic test/microscopy slide | $0.60 ($0.30) income groups 1, 2 | γ | |
| Number of fevers per person per year | 3.50 in U5, 1 in 5+ | Point estimate | Authors' estimation |
| Procurement cost per G6PD deficiency test | $5.00 ($7.00) | γ | Key informant interview |
| In-country delivery mark-up (public health facility) | 15% (20%) | γ | |
| In-country delivery and patient delivery mark-up (communities) | 40% (20%) | γ | |
| $0.48 ($0.20) U5 in WB income groups 1, 2 | γ | ||
| $0.63 ($0.20) 5+ in WB income groups 3, 4 | |||
| $1.30 ($0.40) in U5 in WB income groups 3, 4 | |||
| $1.70 ($1.00) in 5+ in WB income groups 3, 4 | |||
| Procurement cost per dose of chloroquine and primaquine | $0.83 ($0.20) for U5 and $3.33 ($1.50) in 5+ in WHO WPR and SEAR regions | γ | |
| $0.53 ($0.20) for U5 and $2.13 ($1.50) in 5+ elsewhere | |||
| Procurement cost per dose of ACT and primaquine | $1.07 ($0.50) for U5 and $3.52 ($1.50) in 5+ in WHO WPR and SEAR regions | γ | |
| $1.36 ($1.50) for U5 and $4.69 ($1.50) in 5+ elsewhere | |||
| Procurement cost per dose of quinine | $0.91 ($0.20) in U5 | γ | |
| $3.63 ($1.50) in 5+ | |||
| Procurement cost per dose of injectable artesunate | $5.36 ($1.50) in U5 | ||
| $14.4 ($1.50) in 5+ | |||
| In-country delivery mark-up (public health facility) | 15% (20%) | γ | |
| In-country delivery and patient delivery of diagnosis and treatment (as part of community management) | 55% (20%) | γ | |
| Outpatient visit and inpatient stay (range across levels of care/facility type) | Country-specific cost estimates | Uniform | |
| Estimated number of hospital bed day stay for severe malaria episode | 3 | Point estimate | Key informant interviews |
| Cost of epidemiological and entomological surveillance per person at risk, and malaria surveys | $0.05 ($0.03) | γ | |
| Case investigation, per case | $290 ($100) | γ | |
| Proactive case detection, per case | $3.12 ($2.00) | γ | |
| Wastage mark-up | 10% (10%) | γ | |
ACT, artemisinin combination therapy; LLIN, long-lasting insecticidal treated nets; G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency; IPTp, intermittent preventive treatment in children; IRS, indoor residual spraying; SMC, seasonal malaria chemoprevention in children; SP, sulfadoxine-pyremithamine; WB, World Bank; WPR, Western Pacific Region; SEAR, South-East Asia Region; U5, under-5.
Figure 1Global annual investment targets for malaria control and elimination under sustain and accelerate scenarios with 95% uncertainty intervals (constant 2014 US$).
Figure 2Per cent of global annual investment targets for malaria control and elimination under the accelerate scenario, by intervention (constant 2014 US$).
Figure 3(A) Per cent of global annual investment targets for vector control interventions under sustain and accelerate scenarios (constant 2014 US$). (B) Global annual investment targets for diagnostics and treatment of malaria cases in the public sector (health facility and community levels) under sustain and accelerate scenarios (constant 2014 US$). (C) Global annual investment targets for surveillance activities (including diagnostics of non-malaria fevers) under sustain and accelerate scenarios (constant 2014 US$).
Figure 4Sensitivity of estimated global annual investment targets to four stratification approaches under the accelerate scenario (constant 2014 US$).