| Literature DB >> 29363765 |
Abstract
There is compelling evidence that neural tube defects can be prevented through mandatory folic acid fortification. Why, then, is an investment case needed? At the core of the answer to this question is the notion that governments and individuals have limited resources for which there are many competing claims. An investment case compares the costs and benefits of folic acid fortification relative to alternative life-saving investments and informs estimates of the financing required for implementation. Our best estimate is that the cost per death averted through mandatory folic acid fortification is $957 and the cost per disability-adjusted life year is $14.90. Both compare favorably to recommended life-saving interventions, such as the rotavirus vaccine and insecticide-treated bed nets. Thus, there is a strong economic argument for mandatory folic acid fortification. Further improvements to these estimates will require better data on the costs of implementing fortification and on the costs of improving compliance where regulations are already in place.Entities:
Keywords: cost per death averted; disability-adjusted life years; economics; folic acid fortification; neural tube defect prevention
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Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29363765 PMCID: PMC5887927 DOI: 10.1111/nyas.13527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci ISSN: 0077-8923 Impact factor: 5.691
Estimates of cost per death averted (10‐year period, 1,000,000 live births, base cost case) by scenario
| Scenario | Deaths averted (per 1000 live births) | Number of deaths averted | Cost (USD) | Cost (USD) per death averted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Most pessimistic | 0.2 | 2000 | $3,830,000 | $1915 |
| (2) Best estimate | 0.4 | 4000 | $3,830,000 | $957 |
| (3) | 0.6 | 6000 | $3,830,000 | $638 |
| (4) | 0.8 | 8000 | $3,830,000 | $478 |
| (5) | 1.0 | 10,000 | $3,830,000 | $383 |
| (6) Most optimistic | 1.2 | 12,000 | $3,830,000 | $319 |
SOURCE: Author calculations.
Estimates of cost per death averted (10‐year period, 1,000,000 live births) by scenario and cost assumptions
| Cost (USD) per death averted | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario | High cost | Base cost case (from Table | Low cost |
| (1) Most pessimistic | $3015 | $1915 | $1440 |
| (2) Best estimate | $1508 | $957 | $720 |
| (3) | $1005 | $638 | $480 |
| (4) | $754 | $478 | $360 |
| (5) | $603 | $383 | $288 |
| (6) Most optimistic | $503 | $319 | $240 |
SOURCE: Author calculations.
Comparing hypothetical folic acid fortification in Zambia against alternative investments as averted DALYs per dollar spent
| Study | Intervention | Cost per DALY averted (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Hypothetical folic acid fortification in Zambia | $14.90 | |
| Alternative fortification investments | ||
| Fiedler and Lividini | Food fortification, vitamin A, vegetable oil: Zambia | $8.00 |
| Fiedler and Lividini | Food fortification, vitamin A, sugar: Zambia | $20.00 |
| Fiedler and Lividini | Food fortification, vitamin A, wheat flour: Zambia | $40.00 |
| Horton | Food fortification, iron: East Africa | $25.00 |
| Horton | Food fortification, vitamin A: East Africa | $35.00 |
| Horton | Food fortification, zinc: East Africa | $60.00 |
| Alternative health‐related investments | ||
| Pulkki‐Brannstrom | Long‐life insecticide‐treated bed nets | $16.80 |
| Shekar | Treatment for severe acute malnutrition (SAM) (calculated from table 6.2 in Ref. | $175.00 |
Comparing averted DALYs per dollar spent: sensitivity analysis
| Scenario | Intervention | Cost per DALY averted (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Base case | Hypothetical folic acid fortification in Zambia | $14.90 |
| Relative to base case | ||
| High effectiveness (increase impact by 50%) |
Costs: $0.80/birth for years 1–3 $0.20/birth for years 4–10 Impact: ↓ NTD by 0.645/1000 births | $9.93 |
| Low effectiveness (reduce impact by 50%) |
Costs: $0.80/birth for years 1–3 $0.20/birth for years 4–10 Impact: ↓ NTD by 0.215/1000 births | $29.80 |
| High cost (increase cost per year in years 1–3 by 25%; more gradual cost reductions in years 4–10) |
Costs: $1.00/birth for years 1–3 $0.60/birth for years 4–6 $0.30/birth for years 7–10 Impact: ↓ NTD by 0.430/1000 births | $23.43 |
| Low cost (reduce cost per year by 25%) |
Costs: $0.60/birth for years 1–3 $0.15/birth for years 4–10 Impact: ↓ NTD by 0.430/1000 births | $11.22 |
|
High cost (increase cost per year in years 1–3 by 25%; more gradual cost reductions in years 4–10) Low effectiveness (reduce impact by 50%) |
Costs: $1.00/birth for years 1–3 $0.60/birth for years 4–6 $0.30/birth for years 7–10 Impact: ↓ NTD by 0.215/1000 births | $46.86 |
SOURCE: Author calculations.