Cost Effectiveness of Injury Control in Low Income Countries David Bishai, MD, MPH, PhD Johns Hopkins School of Public Health December 11, 2007.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
"3 by 5" progress December 2005 Progress on global access to HIV antiretroviral therapy | 12 April |2 | Antiretroviral therapy coverage in low-
Advertisements

Road Traffic Incident Management Seminar 2014 Supt. Carey Griffiths National Manager: Road Policing.
TB and HIV: Tightly Linked… and Why We Should Care.
Addressing road injuries in Western Asia: A public health perspective Adnan A. Hyder, MD MPH PhD International Injury Research Unit, Department of International.
Ending AIDS by 2030 World AIDS Day Commemoration Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 25 November 2014.
Planning and Design to support Safe Transport including Provisions for NMT -The African Experience Presentation by Paul Kwamusi Road Safety Coordinator,
CHILDHOOD INJURY PREVENTION CONFERENCE1. Child Pedestrian Injuries: A Global Problem Priti Gautam Thursday, June 20 2.
People receiving antiretroviral therapy, 2005 to June 2014, all countries.
The HIV/AIDS Epidemic © 2002 John B. Pryor Illinois State University.
00003-E-1 – December 2004 Global summary of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, December 2004 The ranges around the estimates in this table define the boundaries.
Slide 2 Key Points Although HIV/AIDS is found throughout the world, most people living with HIV/AIDS reside in low- and middle-income countries More people.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2003 Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2003 The ranges around the estimates in this table define the boundaries.
UNAIDS World AIDS Day Report | 2011 Core Epidemiology Slides.
2,100,000 Number of pregnant women with HIV/AIDS 200,000Number of pregnant women receiving PMTCT 630,000Number of MTCT new infections 2,000,000Number of.
Surgeon General’s Global Health Priority David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D. Assistant Secretary for Health & Surgeon General National Aeronautics & Space Administration.
HIV Therapy for the Developing World: A Global Health Challenge Harold W. Jaffe, MD Department of Public Health University of Oxford Oxford, UK.
1 July 2008 e Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, December 2007 Total33 million [30 – 36 million] Adults30.8 million [28.2 – 34.0 million] Women15.5 million.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe - Transport Division Road safety – the global context 17 August, Marmara earthquake, 15,000 lives.
Author(s): Jody Lori, PhD, CNM, FACNM, 2010 License: Unless otherwise noted, this material is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution.
Round Table 7 The capacity of corporations and the public sector to implement decisive actions in order to substantially improve work-related road safety.
ROAD SAFETY- A Practical Approach
Life Impact | The University of Adelaide University of Papua New Guinea Economic Development Lecture 11: Health.
Funding Universal Access through a “Global Health Charge” on alcohol and tobacco: feasibility in the 20 countries with the largest HIV epidemics Dr Andrew.
INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY & PREVENTION. Definitions Injury “Acute exposure to physical agents such as mechanical energy, heat, electricity, chemicals, and ionising.
00003-E-1 – December 2005 Global summary of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, December 2005 The ranges around the estimates in this table define the boundaries.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2003 Adults and children estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS as of end 2003 Total: 34 – 46 million Western Europe – 680.
Rural Women and Science: Enabling and Excluding Factors Marcela Villarreal, Ph.D. Director Gender, Equity and Rural Development Division FAO Women in Science.
July 2015 Core Epidemiology Slides.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2001 Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2001 Number of people living with HIV/AIDS Total40 million Adults37.2 million.
1 Total 33.2 million [30.6 – 36.1 million] Adults 30.8 million [28.2 – 33.6 million] Women 15.4 million [13.9 – 16.6 million] Children under 15 years 2.5.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2002 Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2002 Number of people living with HIV/AIDS Total42 million Adults38.6 million.
The Disease Control Priorities Project ( and Chronic Disease Presentation to the Hemispheric Meeting of the Social Protection.
1 July 2008 e Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, December 2007 Total33 million [30 – 36 million] Adults30.8 million [28.2 – 34.0 million] Women15.5 million.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2001 THE HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC Focus on Africa By Dr. David Elkins HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care Project Nairobi, Kenya September 2002.
Traffic Enforcement Around Commercial Motor Vehicles Presented by Sergeant J.D. Williams Colorado State Patrol.
Global Impact of HIV/AIDS Deborah Lewinsohn, M.D. Infectious Diseases, Pediatrics Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute Oregon Health & Science University.
Global summary of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, December 2003
Regional HIV and AIDS statistics and features, 2006
Contents - HIV global slides
Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, December 2007
Overview of Global HIV Epidemic
Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2003
Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, 2008
Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2003
Estimated number of new HIV infections in young people
Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, 2008
Staff Family Day: understanding safe road use
World Health Organization
Injury: A Global Perspective Steve Amaefuna B.A.
WHO HIV update July 2018 Global epidemic Global progress and cascade
"3 by 5" progress December 2005.
Regional HIV and AIDS statistics and features, 2003 and 2005
Global summary of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, December 2004
Contents - HIV global slides
Road Traffic and Injury Prevention Programme
کلیات آموزش ایدز به زبان ساده
Estimated adult and child deaths from AIDS  2009
July 21, 2016 Potential Domestic Source Financing for Scaled Up Antiretroviral Therapy in 97 Countries, 2016–2020 Arin Dutta, Catherine Barker, and Ashley.
WHO Statistics, 2000 Dr. Rüdiger Krech
Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, December 2007
Contents - HIV global slides
Western & Central Europe
Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2003
Global summary of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, 2005
Contents - HIV global slides
Children (<15 years) estimated to be living with HIV as of end 2005
Regional HIV and AIDS statistics and features for women, 2004 and 2006
Regional HIV and AIDS statistics and features, end of 2004
GLOBAL STATUS REPORT ON ROAD SAFETY SUPPORTING A DECADE OF ACTION
Global summary of the HIV and AIDS epidemic, 2005
Presentation transcript:

Cost Effectiveness of Injury Control in Low Income Countries David Bishai, MD, MPH, PhD Johns Hopkins School of Public Health December 11, 2007

Objective Find out how cost-effective it would be to intervene to control injuries in low income countries –Rationale for doing this –Methods to do this What was learned

Disease Control Priorities Project 2 Chapters paired leading epidemiologists with health economists –General outline of a chapter 1) This is how big the problems is 2) This is a list of interventions with evidence on effectiveness 3) This is the cost and cost per DALY of the intervention –Detailed methods relegated to working papers

Each chapter was a desk study Authors had no budget to do research, but they had travel funds to collaborate For no money, authors had to answer: –Burden? –What works? –What is cost? Mainstay of DCP2 is systematic (and unsystematic) review –Literature on burden, what works, what is cost?

5 Source: WHO Global Burden of Disease Estimates 1) Burden of Disease Disease or Injury 1.Ischemic heart disease 2.Cerebrovascular disease 3.Lower respiratory infections 4.COPD 5.HIV/AIDS 6.Diarrheal diseases 7.TB 8.Childhood diseases 9.Low birth weight 10.Road traffic injuries Number of Deaths 7,033,331 5,344,039 3,857,580 2,621,448 2,570,823 2,019,585 1,596,055 1,391,677 1,343,581 1,203,356 Method: Consult Global Burden of Disease Documents

2) What works? Literature in injury control interventions in low and middle income countries is slim Systematic review limited to low and middle income country intervention evaluations –Speed bumps Afukaar, F. K. (2003). –Bicycle helmets Li and Baker (1997) –Motorcycle helmets Tsauo (1999) –Traffic enforcement (Poli de Figuereido, 2001) –Childproof kerosene storage containers (Krug, 1994)

3) What does it cost? Synthetic models based on estimates of resources and local prices

Editors’ Workplan: Ask for the world settle for a whole lot less Common Problem: No Cost Effectiveness Studies in Literature Standard building blocks for synthetic cost models

Detailed Example: Traffic Enforcement Why? Traffic crashes are the leading contributor to total injuries Enforcement addresses leading cause of crashes –Driver factors responsible for 70-80% of crashes in crash scene studies For enforcement, DCP2 Chapter addressed –“How effective?” –“What cost?”

How effective is traffic enforcement Enforcement studies from high income countries judged inappropriate for extrapolation –Examples Speed and red light cameras Safety belt promotion and enforcement Alcohol control

Evidence on Enforcement Effectiveness in Middle Income Countries Poli de Figueroido, Brazil 1997: Three pronged approach succeeded –Legislation to impose stiffer penalties, –Media coverage of the new regime –Better enforcement Yielded 25% reduction in fatalities

What would traffic enforcement cost? Building a cost model –Traffic cop to vehicle ratios vary around the world: US (Michigan State) 1 cop per 7000 vehicles India (Urban Hyderabad) 1 cop per 1000 vehicles –Citation rates vary around the world US (Michigan) 1 citation per 3 vehicles India (Hyderabad) 8 citations per 10 vehicles

Cost model for Sub Saharan Africa Sub Saharan Africa averages 24,000 vehicles per million people (41 people per vehicle) –Daily pay for African Police officer set at $15.00 –Assume 1 cop per 1000 vehicles –Assume baseline of 1 citation per 6 vehicles Would cost $22,118 (2004) at SSA salaries, fuel and vehicle costs to double traffic police force to the point where it can ticket 1 in 3 vehicles for safety violations

How many lives saved Brazilian experience in enforcement modeled as a doubling of the force –Accompanied by tougher laws and media A Sub Saharan African country improving enforcement in a population of 1 million could prevent 71 deaths per year In Sub-Saharan Africa –Cost effectiveness of $313 per death averted, $11 per DALY averted In East Asia and Pacific –Cost effectiveness of $221 per death averted, $7 per DALY averted

Cost and Effects Space

Expansion Path

Generalized CEA

Other Effective Interventions Exist Cost per DALY Averted InterventionSub Saharan Africa (DALY) East Asia and Pacific (DALY) Speed bumps at top 25%ile dangerous junctions $2$4 Improved enforcement$11$7 Bicycle Helmet Promotion$107 Motorcycle Helmet Promotion$351 By comparison: treating AIDS patients in Africa with simplest regimen of highly active therapy costs $635 per DALY averted. (Bishai and Hyder, 2006)

Model: Extrapolating Results to World Improved enforcement (Doubling Police Presence on Highways combined with Media Campaign) Cost per Death Averted Lower and Middle Income Country Average$1924 East Asia and Pacific$221 Eastern Europe and Central Asia$4,027 Latin America$5,171 Middle East and North Africa$1,657 South Asia$157 Sub Saharan Africa$313 (Bishai and Hyder, 2006)

Validation 1) Systematic review of literature on cost- effectiveness of interventions in low income countries 2) Review literature of effectiveness and extrapolate costs based on a model 3) Assess cost-effectiveness by observing programs in the field

Validating Models with Data A Case Study of Enforcement in Uganda No direct observations of costs and effects of traffic enforcement in low income countries Need to collect field data In Uganda, 19,528 crashes and 2034 deaths in 2005 What Uganda started in 2004 –Updated its traffic code –Launched a traffic patrol unit 4 vehicles and 20 officers On the major trunk roads in Central Uganda.

Traffic Enforcement in Uganda 2006

Police Patrol Police officer using available instruments to patrol violations

Methods Conducted a review and interview of key informants at 12 police stations patrolled along the highways of the country. Monthly data on traffic accidents and fatalities along with traffic citations was recorded on four major roads Time series analysis methods (ARIMA) used to assess whether fatalities per road were lower after intervention Calculated costs and potential revenue from citations in order to determine potential cost offsets.

Time Series Data on Crashes

Results Number killed per month is 16% lower (p<0.05) in post intervention phase Annual cost of traffic patrols amounts to $71,000. Annual number of citations equal up to a value of $327,311. –From government perspective can save 46 lives per year and collect $100,000s at the same time

Comparing model to data Simulation Model predicted enforcement would cost $313 per death averted Field data showed: cost $1555 per death averted saved to invest in traffic safety Simulation model was too optimistic So collecting real field data was worthwhile

Discussion How does $1555 to save a life in Africa stack up? –Most motorists whose lives are saved would live at least another years Traffic enforcement costs $50-$70 per life year saved –Comparison: Antiretroviral treatments for AIDS cost $600 per life year saved Why no PEPFAR for traffic deaths?

Summary When compared to many other interventions in public safety and health improved enforcement is one of the cheapest ways to save life. Unsolved Mystery: –Why are so many traffic enforcement units underfunded?