| Literature DB >> 35434409 |
Akihiro Hirashiki1, Atsuya Shimizu1, Kenichiro Nomoto1, Manabu Kokubo1, Noriyuki Suzuki1, Hidenori Arai2.
Abstract
Background: Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are the leading cause of death worldwide. However, current evidence regarding the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of community intervention and health promotion programs for NCDs, specifically hypertension, obesity, diabetes, and dyslipidemia, in East and Southeast Asia has not yet been systematically reviewed. We systematically reviewed the literature from East and Southeast Asian countries to answer 2 clinical questions: (1) do health promotion programs for hypertension, obesity, diabetes, and dyslipidemia reduce cardiovascular events and mortality; and (2) are these programs cost-effective? Methods andEntities:
Keywords: Asia; Community intervention; Health policy; Health promotion program; Non-communicable disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35434409 PMCID: PMC8977194 DOI: 10.1253/circrep.CR-21-0165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circ Rep ISSN: 2434-0790
Figure.Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) diagram of the articles included in the analysis.
Studies Used to Answer Clinical Question 1
| Underlying | Study | Study | n | Country | Intervention | Duration | Comparison | Population | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | Comparative | Iso et al | 4,687 | Japan | Systematic blood | 5 | Full and minimal intervention | Hypertension | In men, stroke incidence declined more (P<0.001) in the community that received the full-intensity program |
| In women, the stroke incidence declined 45–65% in both communities for the 3 time periods | |||||||||
| Changes in stroke prevalence paralleled those in stroke incidence | |||||||||
| Obesity | Quasi-experimental | Hoshuyama | 21,626 | Japan | Health education | 15 | Obese participants, non-participant | Obesity | Male participants showed significantly lower mortality risk for all-cause death (HR 0.54; 95% CI 0.31–0.94) |
CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.
Studies Used to Answer Clinical Question 4
| Underlying | Study | Study | n | Country | Intervention | Duration | Comparison | Population | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | Comparative | Xie et al | – | China | To inform health | – | Intensive and | Hypertension | The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for intensive hypertension control was estimated at US$1,240 per |
| Intensive hypertension control is more cost-effective than standard hypertension control in China. The cost | |||||||||
| Hypertension | Comparative | Bai et al | 4,902 | China | Hypertension control | 1 year | Before and after the | Hypertension | The total cost of implementing the intervention was US$35,252, or US$7.17 per participant in 2009 |
| On average, SBP decreased from 143 to 131 mmHg (P<0.001) and DBP decreased from 84 to 78 mmHg | |||||||||
| Cost-effectiveness ratios ranged from US$0.53 to US$0.73 per person per 1-mmHg SBP decrease, and | |||||||||
| Hypertension | Comparative | Lim et al | 85 | South | Customized | 8 weeks | Benefit estimations | Blood pressure | Three models were examined: a standard deterministic estimation model, a repeated-measures |
| Diabetes | Propensity | Lian et al | 23,162 | China | PEP | 5 years | PEP vs. non-PEP groups | Type 2 diabetes | The PEP cost per subject was US$247 |
| There was a significantly lower cumulative incidence of all-cause mortality (2.9% vs. 4.6%; P<0.001), any | |||||||||
| The cost per any-cause death, diabetes complication avoided, or cardiovascular event avoided was | |||||||||
| Diabetes | Comparative | Zhang et al | 1.94 | China | Multimedia health promotion | 4 years | Before and after the | Diabetes | To cover 1,000 individuals, the program spent US$6.6 on the use of the Diabetes Risk Score flyer, 31.3¢ on |
| Obesity | Comparative | Chung et al | 50 | China | Face-to-face and | 24 weeks | Comparison of the | 50 adults aged | At Week 6, the face-to-face group showed greater reductions in all variables than the teledietetics group. |
| The observed direct cost for 1% weight loss and 1% body fat loss was US$28.24 and US$17.09, respectively | |||||||||
| Obesity | Comparative | Joo et al | 925 | South | Visiting (V)-type program | 12 weeks | V- vs. R-type | Obese patients | The total cost for the intention-to-treat subjects was US$116,993 and US$24,555 in the V- and R-type |
| The average amount that the participants were willing to pay was US$71 and US$21 in the V- and R-type | |||||||||
| The cost-effectiveness of the V-type community-based short-duration obesity control program was higher |
BMI, body mass index; PEP, Patient Empowerment Program; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year.
Studies Used to Answer Clinical Question 2
| Underlying | Study | Study | n | Country | Intervention | Duration | Comparison | Population | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diabetes | Propensity score | Wong et al | 795 | China | PEP | 21.5 months | 352 PEP participants, 443 | Chinese patients with | After adjusting for confounding variables, PEP participants had a lower rate of all-cause mortality (HR |
| Diabetes | Cluster | Li et al | 577 | China | Lifestyle | 6 years | Randomized (1:1:1:1) to the control | Adults with impaired | Cumulative incidence of CVD-related mortality was 11.9% (95% CI 8.8–15.0) and 19.6% (95% CI |
| All-cause mortality was 28.1% (95% CI 23.9–32.4) and 38.4% (95% CI 30.3–46.5) in the intervention | |||||||||
| The incidence of diabetes was 72.6% (95% CI 68.4–76.8) vs. 89.9% (95% CI 84.9–94.9) in the |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; PEP, Patient Empowerment Program. Other abbreviations as in Table 1.
Study Used to Answer Clinical Question 3
| Underlying | Study | Study | n | Country | Intervention | Duration | Comparison | Population | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | Comparative | Yamagishi | 193 | Japan | Counseling guidance | 9 | Full-intervention vs. minimal- | Hypertension patients in | The prevalence and incidence of stroke were consistently lower in the full- than minimal- |
| The incremental cost was −JPY28,358 per capita over 24 years | |||||||||
| Budget impact: cost of public health services per capita, 4,741 JPY/year; cost of hypertension |