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National mass drug administration costs for lymphatic filariasis elimination
Authors:Goldman Ann S  Guisinger Victoria H  Aikins Moses  Amarillo Maria Lourdes E  Belizario Vicente Y  Garshong Bertha  Gyapong John  Kabali Conrad  Kamal Hussein A  Kanjilal Sanjat  Kyelem Dominique  Lizardo Jefrey  Malecela Mwele  Mubyazi Godfrey  Nitièma P Abdoulaye  Ramzy Reda M R  Streit Thomas G  Wallace Aaron  Brady Molly A  Rheingans Richard  Ottesen Eric A  Haddix Anne C
Institution:Department of Epidemiology, The George Washington School of Public Health and Health Services, Washington, DC, United States of America. sphasg@gwumc.edu
Abstract:

Background

Because lymphatic filariasis (LF) elimination efforts are hampered by a dearth of economic information about the cost of mass drug administration (MDA) programs (using either albendazole with diethylcarbamazine DEC] or albendazole with ivermectin), a multicenter study was undertaken to determine the costs of MDA programs to interrupt transmission of infection with LF. Such results are particularly important because LF programs have the necessary diagnostic and treatment tools to eliminate the disease as a public health problem globally, and already by 2006, the Global Programme to Eliminate LF had initiated treatment programs covering over 400 million of the 1.3 billion people at risk.

Methodology/Principal Findings

To obtain annual costs to carry out the MDA strategy, researchers from seven countries developed and followed a common cost analysis protocol designed to estimate 1) the total annual cost of the LF program, 2) the average cost per person treated, and 3) the relative contributions of the endemic countries and the external partners. Costs per person treated ranged from $0.06 to $2.23. Principal reasons for the variation were 1) the age (newness) of the MDA program, 2) the use of volunteers, and 3) the size of the population treated. Substantial contributions by governments were documented – generally 60%–90% of program operation costs, excluding costs of donated medications.

Conclusions/Significance

MDA for LF elimination is comparatively inexpensive in relation to most other public health programs. Governments and communities make the predominant financial contributions to actual MDA implementation, not counting the cost of the drugs themselves. The results highlight the impact of the use of volunteers on program costs and provide specific cost data for 7 different countries that can be used as a basis both for modifying current programs and for developing new ones.
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