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An economic evaluation of vector control in the age of a dengue vaccine
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نویسنده
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fitzpatrick c. ,haines a. ,bangert m. ,farlow a. ,hemingway j. ,velayudhan r.
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منبع
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plos neglected tropical diseases - 2017 - دوره : 11 - شماره : 8
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چکیده
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Introduction: dengue is a rapidly emerging vector-borne neglected tropical disease,with a 30-fold increase in the number of cases reported since 1960. the economic cost of the illness is measured in the billions of dollars annually. environmental change and unplanned urbanization are conspiring to raise the health and economic cost even further beyond the reach of health systems and households. the health-sector response has depended in large part on control of the aedes aegypti and ae. albopictus (mosquito) vectors. the cost-effectiveness of the first-ever dengue vaccine remains to be evaluated in the field. in this paper,we examine how it might affect the cost-effectiveness of sustained vector control. methods: we employ a dynamic markov model of the effects of vector control on dengue in both vectors and humans over a 15-year period,in six countries: brazil,columbia,malaysia,mexico,the philippines,and thailand. we evaluate the cost (direct medical costs and control programme costs) and cost-effectiveness of sustained vector control,outbreak response and/or medical case management,in the presence of a (hypothetical) highly targeted and low cost immunization strategy using a (non-hypothetical) medium-efficacy vaccine. results: sustained vector control using existing technologies would cost little more than outbreak response,given the associated costs of medical case management. if sustained use of existing or upcoming technologies (of similar price) reduce vector populations by 70–90%,the cost per disability-adjusted life year averted is 2013 us$ 679–1331 (best estimates) relative to no intervention. sustained vector control could be highly cost-effective even with less effective technologies (50–70% reduction in vector populations) and in the presence of a highly targeted and low cost immunization strategy using a medium-efficacy vaccine. discussion: economic evaluation of the first-ever dengue vaccine is ongoing. however,even under very optimistic assumptions about a highly targeted and low cost immunization strategy,our results suggest that sustained vector control will continue to play an important role in mitigating the impact of environmental change and urbanization on human health. if additional benefits for the control of other aedes borne diseases,such as chikungunya,yellow fever and zika fever are taken into account,the investment case is even stronger. high-burden endemic countries should proceed to map populations to be covered by sustained vector control. © 2017 fitzpatrick et al.
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آدرس
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department of control of neglected tropical diseases,world health organization,geneva, Switzerland, department of control of neglected tropical diseases,world health organization,geneva,switzerland,national guideline centre,royal college of physicians,london,united kingdom,toronto health economics and technology assessment collaborative,university health network,toronto, Canada, department of control of neglected tropical diseases,world health organization,geneva, Switzerland, oxford martin school,university of oxford,oxford, United Kingdom, department of vector biology,liverpool school of tropical medicine,liverpool, United Kingdom, department of control of neglected tropical diseases,world health organization,geneva, Switzerland
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Authors
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