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Abstract
Background
Comparative costs of public health interventions provide valuable data for decision making. However, the availability of comprehensive and context-specific costs is often limited. The Enterics for Global Health (EFGH) Shigella surveillance study—a facility-based diarrhea surveillance study across 7 countries—aims to generate evidence on health system and household costs associated with medically attended Shigella diarrhea in children.
Methods
EFGH working groups comprising representatives from each country (Bangladesh, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Pakistan, Peru, and The Gambia) developed the study methods. Over a 24-month surveillance period, facility-based surveys will collect data on resource use for the medical treatment of an estimated 9800 children aged 6–35 months with diarrhea. Through these surveys, we will describe and quantify medical resources used in the treatment of diarrhea (eg, medication, supplies, and provider salaries), nonmedical resources (eg, travel costs to the facility), and the amount of caregiver time lost from work to care for their sick child. To assign costs to each identified resource, we will use a combination of caregiver interviews, national medical price lists, and databases from the World Health Organization and the International Labor Organization. Our primary outcome will be the estimated cost per inpatient and outpatient episode of medically attended Shigella diarrhea treatment across countries, levels of care, and illness severity. We will conduct sensitivity and scenario analysis to determine how unit costs vary across scenarios.
Conclusions
Results from this study will contribute to the existing body of literature on diarrhea costing and inform future policy decisions related to investments in preventive strategies for Shigella.
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Details
1 Department of Global Health, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington , USA
2 Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Aga Khan University , Karachi , Pakistan
3 School of Global and Public Health, Department of Health Systems and Policy, Kamuzu University of Health Sciences , Blantyre , Malawi
4 Infectious Diseases Division, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research , Bangladesh Dhaka , Bangladesh
5 Medical Research Council Unit The Gambia at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine , Fajara , The Gambia
6 Kenya Medical Research Institute, Center for Global Health Research (KEMRI-CGHR) , Kisumu , Kenya
7 Asociación Benéfica PRISMA , Iquitos , Peru
8 Centre pour le Développement des Vaccins du Mali (CVD-Mali) , Bamako , Mali
9 International Vaccine Access Center, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland , USA
10 Division of Infectious Diseases and International Health, School of Medicine, University of Virginia , Charlottesville, Virginia , USA
11 Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland , USA
12 Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Programme , Blantyre, Malawi
13 Institute of Infection, Veterinary and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool , Liverpool , UK