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      Costs of hospitalization with respiratory syncytial virus illness among children aged <5 years and the financial impact on households in Bangladesh, 2010

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          Abstract

          Background

          Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of acute respiratory illness in young children and results in significant economic burden. There is no vaccine to prevent RSV illness but a number of vaccines are in development. We conducted this study to estimate the costs of severe RSV illness requiring hospitalization among children <5 years and associated financial impact on households in Bangladesh. Data of this study could be useful for RSV vaccine development and also the value of various preventive strategies, including use of an RSV vaccine in children if one becomes available.

          Methods

          From May through October 2010, children aged <5 years with laboratory–confirmed RSV were identified from a sentinel influenza program database at four tertiary hospitals. Research assistants visited case–patients’ homes after hospital discharge and administered a structured questionnaire to record direct medical costs (physician consultation fee, costs for hospital bed, medicines and diagnostic tests); non–medical costs (costs for food, lodging and transportation); indirect costs (caregivers’ productivity loss), and coping strategies used by families to pay for treatment. We used WHO–Choice estimates for routine health care service costs. We added direct, indirect and health care service costs to calculate cost–per–episode of severe RSV illness. We used Monte Carlo simulation to estimate annual economic burden for severe RSV illness.

          Findings

          We interviewed caregivers of 39 persons hospitalized for RSV illness. The median direct cost for hospitalization was US$ 62 (interquartile range [IQR] = 43–101), indirect cost was US$ 19 (IQR = 11–29) and total cost was US$ 94 (IQR = 67–127). The median out–of–pocket cost was 24% of monthly household income of affected families (US$ 143), and >50% families borrowed money to meet treatment cost. We estimated that the median direct cost of RSV–associated hospitalization in children aged <5 years in Bangladesh was US$ 10 million (IQR: US$ 7–16 million), the median indirect cost was US$ 3.0 million (IQR: 2–5 million) in 2010.

          Conclusion

          RSV–associated hospitalization among children aged <5 years represents a substantial economic burden in Bangladesh. Affected families frequently incurred considerable out of pocket and indirect costs for treatment that resulted in financial hardship.

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          Most cited references23

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          What are the economic consequences for households of illness and of paying for health care in low- and middle-income country contexts?

          This paper presents the findings of a critical review of studies carried out in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) focusing on the economic consequences for households of illness and health care use. These include household level impacts of direct costs (medical treatment and related financial costs), indirect costs (productive time losses resulting from illness) and subsequent household responses. It highlights that health care financing strategies that place considerable emphasis on out-of-pocket payments can impoverish households. There is growing evidence of households being pushed into poverty or forced into deeper poverty when faced with substantial medical expenses, particularly when combined with a loss of household income due to ill-health. Health sector reforms in LMICs since the late 1980s have particularly focused on promoting user fees for public sector health services and increasing the role of the private for-profit sector in health care provision. This has increasingly placed the burden of paying for health care on individuals experiencing poor health. This trend seems to continue even though some countries and international organisations are considering a shift away from their previous pro-user fee agenda. Research into alternative health care financing strategies and related mechanisms for coping with the direct and indirect costs of illness is urgently required to inform the development of appropriate social policies to improve access to essential health services and break the vicious cycle between illness and poverty.
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            A practical guide for calculating indirect costs of disease.

            There may be some discussion about whether indirect costs should be taken into account at all in an economic appraisal, but there is certainly considerable debate about the proper way of estimating these costs. This reviews offers a practical guide for quantifying and valuing these indirect costs of disease, both at an aggregated level of general cost of illness studies, and in an economic appraisal of specific healthcare programmes. Two methods of calculating these costs are considered: the traditional human capital approach, and the more recently developed friction cost method. The former method estimates the potential value of lost production as a result of disease, whereas the latter method intends to derive more realistic estimates of indirect costs, taking into account the degree of scarcity of labour in the economy. All necessary steps in the estimation procedure and the data required at various points will be described and discussed in detail.
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              Economic impact of respiratory syncytial virus-related illness in the US: an analysis of national databases.

              To determine the impact of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection on healthcare resource use and costs in the US from the third-party payer perspective. The study retrospectively analysed cross-sectional medical encounter data from three federally funded databases that comprise nationally representative samples of hospital inpatient stays, physician office visits and visits to hospital outpatient departments and emergency rooms. Identification of RSV infection-related medical encounters was based on the occurrence of RSV-specific International Classification of Diseases (9th Edition)-Clinical Modification diagnosis codes (079.6, 466.11, 480.1) as principal discharge diagnoses or the assumption that 10-15% of all otitis media visits were due to RSV infection. Outpatient drug costs were estimated based on average wholesale price, and physician fees and test/procedure costs were estimated based on prevailing national fees. Inpatient costs were estimated from total billed charges using a cost-to-charge ratio of 0.53. In 2000, nearly 98% of RSV infection-related hospitalisations occurred in children <5 years old. There were approximately 86,000 hospitalisations, 1.7 million office visits, 402 000 emergency room visits and 236,000 hospital outpatient visits for children <5 years old that were attributable to RSV infection. Total annual direct medical costs for all RSV infection-related hospitalisations ($US394 million) and other medical encounters ($US258 million) for children <5 years old were estimated at $US652 million in 2000. Otitis media was a major cost driver for physician visits. RSV infection-related hospitalisations increased from 1993 to 2000, but average costs per hospitalisation were relatively stable. Treatment of RSV infection-related illness represents a significant healthcare burden in the US. The economic impact of ambulatory care for RSV infection-related illness could be as important as that for RSV infection-related hospitalisation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Glob Health
                J Glob Health
                JGH
                Journal of Global Health
                Edinburgh University Global Health Society
                2047-2978
                2047-2986
                June 2017
                13 June 2017
                : 7
                : 1
                : 010412
                Affiliations
                [1 ]International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh
                [2 ]School of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia
                [3 ]Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
                [4 ]James P Grant School of Public Health, BRAC Institute of Global Health, BRAC University, Dhaka, Bangladesh
                [5 ]Discipline of Paediatrics, School of Women’s and Children’s Health, University of New South Wales, Randwick, Australia
                [6 ]Oxford Policy Management, Oxford, UK
                [7 ]Institute of Epidemiology, Disease Control and Research, Dhanka, Bangladesh
                Author notes
                Correspondence to:
Mejbah Uddin Bhuiyan
icddr,b
68, Shaheed Tajuddin Ahmed Sarani
Mohakhali
Dhaka–1212
Bangladesh
 mejbah.bhuiyan@ 123456uwa.edu.au
                Article
                jogh-07-010412
                10.7189/jogh.07.010412
                5502704
                28702175
                170cedf9-7168-4eb4-9bd1-236bc876271a
                Copyright © 2017 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved.

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 3, Equations: 0, References: 40, Pages: 9
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                Public health
                Public health

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