6 results on '"Dudley Tarlton"'
Search Results
2. The case for investing in the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases in the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council: an economic evaluation
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Khalifa Elmusharaf, Daniel Grafton, Johanna S Jung, Emily Roberts, Yahya Al-Farsi, Ameera Ali Al Nooh, Buthaina Bin Belaila, Amin ElShamy, Hamoud Al-Zuabi, Kholood Ateeq Al Mutawa, Shadha Alraisi, Najla Al Lawat, Ali Gharbal, Shaker Alomary, Alexey Kulikov, Nasim Pourghazian, Slim Slama, Dudley Tarlton, and Nicholas Banatvala
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42 Health sciences ,Kuwait ,Oman ,Health Policy ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,economic burden ,Humans ,Health sciences ,non-communicable disease (NCD) ,FOS: Health sciences ,Noncommunicable Diseases ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
BackgroundWhile the non-communicable disease (NCD) burden in the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates) has surged over the past decades, the costs and return on investment (ROI) of implementing cost-effective, WHO-recommended NCD interventions have not been established.MethodsWe performed an economic analysis to estimate the ROI from scaling up four sets of NCD interventions over 15 years. We estimated the direct costs of the four main NCDs (cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and chronic respiratory diseases) using a prevalence-based, bottom-up cost-of-illness approach. We estimated indirect costs based on productivity loss due to absenteeism, presenteeism and premature deaths. We costed the scaling up of interventions using the WHO Costing Tool and assessed the health impact of interventions using the OneHealth Tool. We calculated ROI by comparing productivity and social benefits with the total costs of implementing the interventions.ResultsThe four main NCDs cost the GCC economy nearly US$50 billion in 2019, equal to 3.3% of its gross domestic product. The indirect costs are estimated at US$20 billion or 40% of the total burden. Implementing the four modelled intervention packages in the six GCC countries over 15 years will cost US$14 billion, with an ROI of US$4.9 for every US$1 invested and significant health and social benefits, including 290 000 averted premature deaths.ConclusionBased on the results of these six investment cases, we recommend actions to scale up current WHO-recommended cost-effective interventions, strengthen whole-of-government action, drive the NCD legislative agenda, build out the evidence base, generate additional advocacy material, and increase regional collaboration and data-sharing to establish best practices and monitor impact.
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- 2023
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3. Prioritising action on alcohol for health and development
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Dudley Tarlton, Vladimir Poznyak, Ariella Rojhani, Natalia Linou, Lucinda Westerman, Adam Karpati, Sally Casswell, Dag Rekve, Maristela Monteiro, Øystein Bakke, Maik Duennbier, Alexey Kulikov, Kristina Sperkova, and Nicholas Banatvala
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Alcohol ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Effective interventions ,chemistry ,Action (philosophy) ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Health and development ,business ,Psychiatry ,Harmful use - Abstract
Despite the existence of cost effective interventions to reduce harmful use of alcohol, many countries are not giving it the attention it deserves, say Dag Rekve and colleagues
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- 2019
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4. Correction: The investment case as a mechanism for addressing the NCD burden: Evaluating the NCD institutional context in Jamaica, and the return on investment of select interventions
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Karin Santi, Nicholas Banatvala, Dudley Tarlton, Rachel Nugent, Roy Small, Rosa Carolina Sandoval, Elisa Prieto, Brian Hutchinson, Tamu Davidson, Alexey Kulikov, Douglas Webb, Delia Itziar Belausteguigoitia, and Kofi Acquah
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Jamaica ,Interview ,Economics ,Endocrine Disorders ,Science ,Psychological intervention ,Social Sciences ,Geographical locations ,03 medical and health sciences ,Health Economics ,Endocrinology ,Development Economics ,0302 clinical medicine ,Economic Growth ,Return on investment ,Economic cost ,Development economics ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Diabetes Mellitus ,030212 general & internal medicine ,10. No inequality ,health care economics and organizations ,Stock (geology) ,Caribbean ,Health Care Policy ,Multidisciplinary ,Health economics ,biology ,030503 health policy & services ,1. No poverty ,Correction ,Mental health ,Economic Analysis ,3. Good health ,Health Care ,Metabolic Disorders ,Toll ,North America ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,Business ,People and places ,0305 other medical science ,Finance ,Research Article - Abstract
Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) are a broad challenge for decision-makers. NCDs account for seven out of every 10 deaths globally, with 42 percent occurring prematurely in individuals under age 70. Despite their heavy toll, NCDs are underfunded, with only around two percent of global funding dedicated to the disease set. Country governments are responsible for funding targeted actions to reduce the NCD burden, but among other priorities, many have yet to invest in the health-system interventions and policy measures that can reduce the burden. This article examines “investment cases” as a potential mechanism for catalyzing attention to—and funding for—NCDs. In Jamaica, using the UN inter-agency OneHealth Tool, we conducted an economic analysis to estimate the return-on-investment from scaling up strategic clinical interventions, and from implementing or intensifying policy measures that target NCD risk factors. In addition, we conducted an institutional and context (ICA) analysis, interviewing stakeholders across sectors to take stock of promising policy pathways (e.g., areas of general consensus, political appetite and opportunity) as well as challenges to implementation. The economic analysis found that scaling up clinical interventions that target CVD, diabetes, and mental health disorders, and policy measures that target tobacco and alcohol use, would save over 6,600 lives between 2017–2032, and avert JMD 81.3 billion (USD 640 million) in direct and indirect economic costs that result from mortality and morbidity linked to NCDs. The ICA uncovered government economic growth targets and social priorities that would be aided by increased attention to NCDs, and it linked these targets and priorities to the economic analysis.
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- 2019
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5. Using economic evidence to support policy decisions to fund interventions for non-communicable diseases
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Nick Banatvala, Rosa Carolina Sandoval, Dudley Tarlton, Alexey Kulikov, Anselm Hennis, Itziar Belausteguigoitia, Douglas Webb, and Melanie Y Bertram
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Cost-Benefit Analysis ,MEDLINE ,Psychological intervention ,Public Policy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Global Health ,Resource Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Policy decision ,Global health ,Financial Support ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Noncommunicable Diseases ,Intersectoral Collaboration ,Cost–benefit analysis ,Public economics ,Health Plan Implementation ,General Medicine ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Government Programs ,Resource allocation ,Public Health ,Business ,Health Expenditures ,Analysis - Abstract
Economic analysis of interventions to reduce non-communicable diseases can encourage countries to increase investment, say Melanie Bertram and colleagues
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- 2019
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6. Universal health coverage: necessary but not sufficient
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Susana T. Fried, Tamara Stanley, Dudley Tarlton, Atif Khurshid, Sonia Gloss, Claudia Paz, and Douglas Webb
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Male ,Economic growth ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sexual and reproductive health and rights ,Context (language use) ,Global Health ,Health Services Accessibility ,Universal Health Insurance ,Political science ,Reproductive rights ,Humans ,Health policy ,Reproductive health ,media_common ,Sustainable development ,Human rights ,Reproductive Rights ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Reproductive Health ,Reproductive Medicine ,Health education ,Female ,business ,Goals - Abstract
In this article, we highlight key considerations for better addressing sexual and reproductive health and rights issues within universal health coverage (UHC), particularly in the context of the post-2015 sustainable development agenda. We look at UHC as a health, development and health care financing issue, and its history. We discuss its limitations as currently understood from a human rights perspective, and show why structural barriers to health and the legal and policy environment, which are essential to health (particularly to sexual and reproductive health and rights), require critical consideration in current discussions about health in the post-2015 development framework and must be taken into account above and beyond UHC in any future health goal. As a result, we suggest that UHC alone will not result in universal access to sexual and reproductive health, and certainly not to sexual and reproductive rights. Instead, it should be considered as a means to achieving broader health and development goals. A goal such as seeking to reach the highest attainable standard of health or maximizing healthy lives that is informed by a rights-based approach should be the aspiration for the post-2015 development agenda.
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- 2013
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