| Literature DB >> 32021898 |
Massimo Canali1, Maurizio Aragrande1, Andrea Angheben2, Gioia Capelli3, Michele Drigo4, Federico Gobbi2, Francesca Tamarozzi5, Rudi Cassini4.
Abstract
Epidemiology and health economics have systemic interdependencies. The identification of the economic outcomes of any disease is operated by overlapping its epidemiology with the economic functions of the impacted entities. This communication presents two epidemiologic-economic models designed to evaluate the economic burden of cystic echinococcosis and leishmaniasis in Veneto (Northeastern Italy). Following a One Health approach, the research integrates expertise from different disciplines and institutions and fulfilled its first stage by defining the relevant cost categories and the data collection strategy for the two diseases in the study area. The two models identify the relevant epidemiological factors and the economic outcomes of infections in both animals and humans. The results, visualized in flow charts indicating the types of costs associated with these zoonoses, will guide data collection and the epidemiologic and economic assessment in the next research stages. This experience shows that One Health methods, although still innovative or unusual in many scientific and professional contexts, can be applied by using relatively limited resources and already available professional skills.Entities:
Keywords: Animal health economics; Cystic echinococcosis; Epidemiologic-economic models; Epidemiology of parasitic zoonoses; Health economics; Leishmaniasis; Neglected zoonosis; One health economics
Year: 2019 PMID: 32021898 PMCID: PMC6995255 DOI: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2019.100115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: One Health ISSN: 2352-7714
Project's research team members (RT) and supervisors of the external interdisciplinary network (IDN): affiliations, background, expertise, and contributions.
| Member | Affiliation | Disciplinary background | Specific expertise | Contribution to the project |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT1 | Academic institute (Italy) | Vet. medicine, parasitology | Epidemiology of CE and CanL | Project planning, project coordination |
| RT2 | Academic institute (Italy) | Agricultural economics | Agricultural and animal health economics | Project planning, economic evaluation |
| RT3 | Academic institute (Italy) | Agricultural economics | Agricultural and animal health economics | Project planning, economic evaluation |
| RT4 | Academic institute (Italy) | Vet. medicine, epidemiology | Epidemiology and modelling | Conceptualization of epidemiologic aspects |
| RT5 | Vet. public health and research institute (Italy) | Vet. medicine, parasitology | Epidemiology and Diagnostics related to CE and CanL | Conceptualization of veterinary aspects |
| RT6 | Hospital research institute (Italy) | Hum. medicine, tropical diseases | Epidemiology and clinical aspects of Human CE | Conceptualization of human CE aspects |
| RT7 | Hospital research institute (Italy) | Hum. medicine, tropical diseases | Epidemiology and clinical aspects of HumL | Conceptualization of HumL aspects |
| IDN1 | Regional health authority (Veneto) | Hum. medicine, management | Preventive human health | Decision-makers perspective for human public health |
| IDN2 | Regional health authority (Veneto) | Vet. medicine, management | Veterinary public health | Decision-makers perspective for veterinary health |
| IDN3 | Local health authority (Verona District) | Vet. medicine | Veterinary public health, animal health | Perspective of local veterinary services |
| IDN4 | Private professional (Italy) | Vet. medicine | Professional veterinarian (pet sector) | Perspective of dog owners' and vet. private practice |
| IDN5 | National Institute of Health (Italy) | Epidemiology, public health | CE (international expert) | Perspective from a wide experience of CE control |
| IDN6 | National Institute of Health (Italy) | Epidemiology, public health | Leishmaniasis (international expert) | Perspective from a wide experience of leishmaniasis control |
| IDN7 | Academic institute (UK) | Vet. medicine, vet. economics, One Health | One Health (international expert) | One Health perspective and overall revision |
Fig. 1Epidemiologic-economic model flowchart of cystic echinococcosis in Veneto.
Fig. 2Epidemiologic-economic model flowchart of leishmaniasis in Veneto.
Data collection strategy for the cost evaluation of cystic echinococcosis and leishmaniasis in the analysed region.
| Type of cost | Data needed for the economic evaluation (analysed period 2001–2017) | Data sources | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cystic echinococcosis (CE) | Leishmaniasis | ||
| Costs for human health care; | Number of human CE cases in residents in the analysed region by age, sex, and nationality; distribution of liver CE, lung CE, and other potential localizations; | Number of human cases in residents in the analysed region by age, sex, and nationality; distribution of cutaneous and visceral leishmaniosis; | (a) |
| Diagnostic-therapeutic protocols applied and distribution of patients' management according to “watch and wait”, medical, and surgical treatment and respective outcomes; | Diagnostic-therapeutic protocols applied and distribution of patients' management according to the cutaneous and visceral forms and respective outcomes; | (a) (b) (c) | |
| Total cost per patient for clinical management, including diagnostics, hospitalization, surgery and postoperative follow up, medical treatments and patient monitoring; | Total cost per patient for clinical management, including diagnostics, hospitalization, post-hospitalization follow-up, medical treatments and patient monitoring; | (a) (b) (c) | |
| Productivity losses in the human population; | Patients' disability over time according to the therapeutic outcomes; gross domestic income per capita in the analysed region; | Patients' disability over time according to the therapeutic outcomes; gross domestic income per capita in the analysed region; | (a) (b) (c) (d) |
| Livestock production losses | Data on cattle and sheep heads, production, and production systems in the analysed region; | (c) (d) (e) | |
| Number of positive cases recorded in slaughterhouses for cattle and sheep (and respective livestock categories) from farms of the analysed region; | (f) | ||
| Weight losses and milk production decrease in affected animals; livestock and livestock product prices; | (c) (g) | ||
| Offal condemnations of positive animals at slaughterhouses; offal market prices; costs for offal disposal; | (c) (f) (g) | ||
| Costs for treatments of symptomatic dogs | Treatment protocols for symptomatic dogs; number of symptomatic dogs in the region; number of dogs treated in the region under the different protocols; | (c) (h) (i) (j) | |
| Unit cost of dog treatment for the different treatment protocols; | (h) (i) (k) | ||
| Costs for preventive treatment of exposed dogs | Definition of “at-risk” dog and standard preventive treatment protocol for at-risk dogs; number of at-risk dogs in the region; number of dogs subjected to preventive treatments; | Definition of a standard preventive treatment protocol; total number of dogs in the areas where the vector is present; number of dogs subjected to preventive treatments; | (c) (h) (i) (j) |
| Annual unit cost for dog treatment; | Annual unit cost for dog preventive treatment; | (h) (i) (k) | |
| Costs for surveillance of susceptible livestock species; | Notifications from slaughterhouses of infected animals coming from the analysed region: number and unit costs; | (i) (l) | |
| Investigations on farm outbreaks in the region by the public veterinary services: number and unit costs; | (i) (l) | ||
| Costs related to registrations, periodical reporting and maintenance of the information system; | (i) (l) | ||
| (a) Data from the hospital discharge records (HDRs) | (h) Interviews with private practice veterinarians managing animal health in farms and veterinary clinics for pets; | ||