101. Assessing the cost-effectiveness of different measles vaccination strategies for children in the Democratic Republic of Congo
- Author
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Philip Eckhoff, Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tafum, Alvan Cheng, Sue Gerber, Reena H. Doshi, Gerald F. Kominski, Patrick Mukadi, Nicole A. Hoff, Emile Okitolonda Wemakoy, Calixte Shidi, and Anne W. Rimoin
- Subjects
and promotion of well-being ,Cost effectiveness ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Medical and Health Sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Pediatric ,Vaccination ,Biological Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,3.4 Vaccines ,Child, Preschool ,Democratic Republic of the Congo ,Molecular Medicine ,Vaccine-preventable diseases ,Infection ,Adolescent ,030231 tropical medicine ,Measles Vaccine ,Rubella ,Measles ,Vaccine Related ,03 medical and health sciences ,Environmental health ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Preschool ,Disease burden ,Immunization Schedule ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,business.industry ,Immunization Programs ,Prevention ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Newborn ,Democratic Republic of Congo ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Immunization ,Immunology ,Cost-effectiveness ,Measles vaccine ,business - Abstract
IntroductionOne of the goals of the Global Measles and Rubella Strategic Plan is the reduction in global measles mortality, with high measles vaccination coverage as one of its core components. While measles mortality has been reduced more than 79%, the disease remains a major cause of childhood vaccine preventable disease burden globally. Measles immunization requires a two-dose schedule and only countries with strong, stable immunization programs can rely on routine services to deliver the second dose. In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), weak health infrastructure and lack of provision of the second dose of measles vaccine necessitates the use of supplementary immunization activities (SIAs) to administer the second dose.MethodsWe modeled three vaccination strategies using an age-structured SIR (Susceptible-Infectious-Recovered) model to simulate natural measles dynamics along with the effect of immunization. We compared the cost-effectiveness of two different strategies for the second dose of Measles Containing Vaccine (MCV) to one dose of MCV through routine immunization services over a 15-year time period for a hypothetical birth cohort of 3 million children.ResultsCompared to strategy 1 (MCV1 only), strategy 2 (MCV2 by SIA) would prevent a total of 5,808,750 measles cases, 156,836 measles-related deaths and save U.S. $199 million. Compared to strategy 1, strategy 3 (MCV2 by RI) would prevent a total of 13,232,250 measles cases, 166,475 measles-related deaths and save U.S. $408 million.DiscussionVaccination recommendations should be tailored to each country, offering a framework where countries can adapt to local epidemiological and economical circumstances in the context of other health priorities. Our results reflect the synergistic effect of two doses of MCV and demonstrate that the most cost-effective approach to measles vaccination in DRC is to incorporate the second dose of MCV in the RI schedule provided that high enough coverage can be achieved.
- Published
- 2017