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The Cost of Annual versus Biannual Community-Directed Treatment of Onchocerciasis with Ivermectin: Ghana as a Case Study
Authors:Hugo C. Turner  Mike Y. Osei-Atweneboana  Martin Walker  Edward J. Tettevi  Thomas S. Churcher  Odame Asiedu  Nana-Kwadwo Biritwum  María-Gloria Basá?ez
Affiliation:1. Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine (St. Mary''s Campus), Imperial College London, Norfolk Place, London, United Kingdom.; 2. Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Water Research Institute, Accra, Ghana.; 3. Neglected Tropical Diseases Control Programme, Disease Control and Prevention Department, Ghana Health Service, Accra, Ghana.; University of Ghana, Ghana,
Abstract:

Background

It has been proposed that switching from annual to biannual (twice yearly) mass community-directed treatment with ivermectin (CDTI) might improve the chances of onchocerciasis elimination in some African foci. However, historically, relatively few communities have received biannual treatments in Africa, and there are no cost data associated with increasing ivermectin treatment frequency at a large scale. Collecting cost data is essential for conducting economic evaluations of control programmes. Some countries, such as Ghana, have adopted a biannual treatment strategy in selected districts. We undertook a study to estimate the costs associated with annual and biannual CDTI in Ghana.

Methodology

The study was conducted in the Brong-Ahafo and Northern regions of Ghana. Data collection was organized at the national, regional, district, sub-district and community levels, and involved interviewing key personnel and scrutinizing national records. Data were collected in four districts; one in which treatment is delivered annually, two in which it is delivered biannually, and one where treatment takes place biannually in some communities and annually in others. Both financial and economic costs were collected from the health care provider''s perspective.

Principal Findings

The estimated cost of treating annually was US Dollars (USD) 0.45 per person including the value of time donated by the community drug distributors (which was estimated at USD 0.05 per person per treatment round). The cost of CDTI was approximately 50–60% higher in those districts where treatment was biannual than in those where it was annual. Large-scale mass biannual treatment was reported as being well received and considered sustainable.

Conclusions/Significance

This study provides rigorous evidence of the different costs associated with annual and biannual CDTI in Ghana which can be used to inform an economic evaluation of the debate on the optimal treatment frequency required to control (or eliminate) onchocerciasis in Africa.
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