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Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-164949

ABSTRACT

Objectives: Zinc supplements may decrease incidence of diarrhea among young children at risk of zinc deficiency. We estimated the cost-effectiveness of three approaches for delivery of preventive and therapeutic zinc supplements in rural Burkina Faso. Methods: Cost estimates were derived from data collected during a community-based randomized zinc trial, information on ongoing child-health days to distribute public health services, and an indepth study of the current health care system. Diarrhea incidence reduction is based on intent-totreat analysis of zinc trial data. Activity-based costing using an ingredients approach accounts for the costs of mutually exclusive inputs related to defined program activities for each approach. Cost-effectiveness is analyzed and compared across an intermittent preventive zinc (IPZ) approach (quarterly delivery of 10-days of 10 mg/d supplements to childrens’ homes), and a therapeutic approach (10-days of 20 mg/d supplements delivered during an ill-child consultation at a local clinic (TZ-CSPS) or via community-based health worker (TZ-CHW)). We assume 81.6% of children are reached with IPZ and .06% and 52% of diarrhea cases treated with TZ-CSPS and TZCHW, respectively. Results: Estimated annual program cost per additional child reached is $3.52 (IPZ), $3.49 (TZCSPS) and $17.59 (TZ-CHW). Cost per death averted in the first program-year is estimated to be $3164 (IPZ), $7363 (TZ-CSPS), and $14068 (TZ-CHW), assuming a diarrhea case fatality rate of 0.3% and 2.64 episodes of diarrhea/child/year. Estimated cases of diarrhea averted per year are 11.5% (IPZ), 0.9% (TZ-CSPS), and 8.2%(TZ-CHW). Conclusions: IPZ is the most cost-effective approach for a zinc program among our study population.

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