196 results on '"Palacios, Alfredo"'
Search Results
152. La Máquina y el Evangelio.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO L.
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LATIN American authors ,PHILOSOPHY ,LITERARY criticism - Published
- 1940
153. Carga de enfermedad y económica atribuible al consumo de bebidas azucaradas en El Salvador.
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Cairoli, Federico Rodríguez, Vásquez, Giovanni Guevara, Bardach, Ariel, Espinola, Natalia, Perelli, Lucas, Balan, Darío, Palacios, Alfredo, Augustovski, Federico, Pichón-Riviere, Andrés, and Alcaraz, Andrea
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- *
PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Objective. To estimate the burden of disease and economic burden attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El Salvador. Methods. A comparative risk model was used to estimate the effects on deaths, health events, disability- adjusted life years (DALYs), and direct medical costs attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages. Results. A total of 520 deaths (8 per 100 000 individuals), 214 082 health events (3 220 per 100 000 individuals) and 16 643 DALYs could be attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El Salvador, representing US$69.35 million in direct medical costs for the year 2020. In particular, type 2 diabetes (T2DM) events attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages could represent more than 20% of total T2DM cases in the country. Conclusion. A high number of deaths, events, and costs could be attributed to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El Salvador. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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154. Mensaje a la Juventud Estudiantil y a la Clase Obrera de Norte-América.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO
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LATIN America-United States relations ,MONROE doctrine ,IMPERIALISM - Published
- 1927
155. SWITCHING FROM CIGARETTES TO ELECTRONIC NICOTINE DELIVERY SYSTEM: RAPID SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS AND ECONOMIC ASPECTS.
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Ciapponi, Agustín, Cairoli, Federico Rodríguez, Solioz, Germán, Rojas-Roque, Carlos, Hernández-Vásquez, Akram, Palacios, Alfredo, and Bardach, Ariel
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Objectives.: To assess how and in what extent the electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) use substituted the consumption of traditional combustible cigarettes (c-cigarettes, c-cig). Materials and methods.: We performed a systematic review of the literature up to August 2019 in scientific databases. Primary outcomes were proportion of complete or partial substitution of conventional to electronic cigarettes and related economic aspects. Secondary outcomes were odds ratio of substitution and country-wise time trends. Results.: We retrieved 3,628 references and included 49 studies, providing economic and epidemiological data. Economic studies of cross-price elasticity showed that combustible cigarettes are partially substitutable for electronic cigarettes. Most studies reported that electronic cigarettes consumption prevalence increased over time. Three studies reported a significant reduction of combustible cigarettes consumed per day among dual users (combustible- plus electronic- cigarettes users) versus combustible-cigarettes users. The pooled adjusted odds ratio of quitting combustible cigarettes among electronic cigarettes users versus never or past electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes, e-cig) users was 1.19 (95% confidence interval 1.09 to 1.30; heterogeneity score 0%). Longitudinal studies showed globally a growing prevalence of electronic cigarettes use, mainly in adolescents. A negative relationship between consumption and price increase of electronic and combustible cigarettes was found. Conclusion.: The chance of quitting smoking combustible cigarettes among current electronic nicotine delivery systems users was increased with respect to never- or past- electronic nicotine delivery systems users. Economic studies reported that electronic cigarette is partially substitutable for combustible cigarettes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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156. Mística de la Nueva Democracia.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO L.
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HISPANIC American literature (Spanish) ,DEMOCRACY ,CONDUCT of life - Published
- 1940
157. A LA JUVENTUD UNIVERSITARIA DE IBERO-AMERICA.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO L.
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LATIN American social conditions ,SOCIAL change - Published
- 1925
158. La Vieja Generación.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO L.
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GENERATIONS ,MATERIALISM ,CONTRADICTION - Published
- 1948
159. Concepto de la Enseñanza Secundaria.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO L.
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AIMS & objectives of secondary education ,TEACHING ,INTELLECT - Published
- 1943
160. La Universidad Nueva.
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PALACIOS, ALFREDO
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- PALACIOS, Alfredo, LA Universidad Nueva (Book)
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- 1926
161. Evaluaciones en la universidad desde la óptica de estudiantes de primer año
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Margarita Haydeé Guajardo, Palacios, Alejandro, Cordero, Silvina, Merino, Graciela, Lapasta, Leticia, Di Mauro, María Florencia, and Palacios, Alfredo Daniel
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Socio-economic profile ,Universidad ,Evaluación ,Educación ,Evaluaciones escritas en Bioquímica ,Estudiantes universitarios ,estudiantes cursantes de primer año, perfil socioeconómico, evaluaciones escritas de Bioquímica, vivencias y principales obstáculos ,Trayectoría del estudiante ,Estudiantes ,Written evaluations in Biochemistry ,Experiences and main obstacles ,Estudiantes cursantes de primer año ,Perfil socio económico ,Freshmen students ,Enseñanza superior ,Vivencias y principales obstáculos - Abstract
En este trabajo de Tesis para la Maestria en Educación en Ciencias Exactas y Naturales se indagó sobre las experiencias que viven estudiantes de primer año de la carrera de Médico Veterinario, de la Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias de la UNLP, al enfrentarse a las instancias de evaluación propuestas por la materia Bioquímica. Especificamente se analizaron los obstáculos que, desde su propia óptica, encuentran en situaciones evaluativas., Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación
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- 2019
162. Ultrafast electron dynamics in phenylalanine initiated by attosecond pulses
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S. De Camillis, Alicia Palacios, Sunilkumar Anumula, Francesca Calegari, David Ayuso, Fabio Frassetto, Andrea Trabattoni, Jason B. Greenwood, L. Belshaw, Fernando Martín, Luca Poletto, Mauro Nisoli, Pietro Decleva, UAM. Departamento de Química, RESTREPO PALACIOS, Alfredo, Decleva, Pietro, Calegari, F, Ayuso, D., Trabattoni, A., Belshaw, L., De Camillis, S., Anumula, S., Frassetto, F., Poletto, L., Palacios, A., Greenwood, J. B., Martín, F., and Nisoli, M.
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Time Factors ,Time Factor ,Attosecond ,Phenylalanine ,Physics::Optics ,Nanotechnology ,Electrons ,02 engineering and technology ,Electron dynamics ,Electron ,01 natural sciences ,Ion ,Chemical structure ,Ionization ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Atomic and Molecular Clusters ,Molecule ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Physics::Chemical Physics ,010306 general physics ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Ions ,Multidisciplinary ,Molecular Structure ,Chemistry ,Medicine (all) ,Polyatomic ion ,Química ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Chemical physics ,Density functional theory ,ddc:500 ,0210 nano-technology ,Ultrashort pulse ,Quantum chemistry - Abstract
This is the author’s version of the work. It is posted here by permission of the AAAS for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Science on Volume 346, 17 october 2014, DOI: 10.1126/science.1254061., In the past decade, attosecond technology has opened up the investigation of ultrafast electronic processes in atoms, simple molecules, and solids. Here, we report the application of isolated attosecond pulses to prompt ionization of the amino acid phenylalanine and the subsequent detection of ultrafast dynamics on a sub-4.5-fs temporal scale, which is shorter than the vibrational response of the molecule. The ability to initiate and observe such electronic dynamics in polyatomic molecules represents a crucial step forward in attosecond science, which is progressively moving toward the investigation of more and more complex systems, We acknowledge the support from the European Research Council under the ERC grants no. 227355 ELYCHE and 290853 XCHEM, from LASERLAB-EUROPE (grant agreement no. 284464, EC's Seventh Framework Programme), from European COST Action CM1204 XLIC, the MICINN Project FIS2010-15127, the ERA-Chemistry Project PIM2010EEC-00751, the European Grants MC-ITN CORINF and MC-RG ATTOTREND 268284, the UK’s STFC Laser Loan Scheme, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (grant EP/J007048/1), the Leverhulme Trust (grant RPG-2012-735), and the Northern Ireland Department of Employment and Learning
- Published
- 2014
163. Factors affecting the implementation of calcium supplementation strategies during pregnancy to prevent pre-eclampsia: a mixed-methods systematic review.
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Cormick G, Moraa H, Zahroh RI, Allotey J, Rocha T, Peña-Rosas JP, Qureshi ZP, Hofmeyr GJ, Mistry H, Smits L, Vogel JP, Palacios A, Gwako GN, Abalos E, Larbi KK, Carroli G, Riley R, Snell KI, Thorson A, Young T, Betran AP, Thangaratinam S, and Bohren MA
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- Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Calcium therapeutic use, Dietary Supplements, Calcium, Dietary, Prenatal Care methods, Pre-Eclampsia prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: Daily calcium supplements are recommended for pregnant women from 20 weeks' gestation to prevent pre-eclampsia in populations with low dietary calcium intake. We aimed to improve understanding of barriers and facilitators for calcium supplement intake during pregnancy to prevent pre-eclampsia., Design: Mixed-method systematic review, with confidence assessed using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations-Confidence in the Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative research approach., Data Sources: MEDLINE and EMBASE (via Ovid), CINAHL and Global Health (via EBSCO) and grey literature databases were searched up to 17 September 2022., Eligibility Criteria: We included primary qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods studies reporting implementation or use of calcium supplements during pregnancy, excluding calcium fortification and non-primary studies. No restrictions were imposed on settings, language or publication date., Data Extraction and Synthesis: Two independent reviewers extracted data and assessed risk of bias. We analysed the qualitative data using thematic synthesis, and quantitative findings were thematically mapped to qualitative findings. We then mapped the results to behavioural change frameworks to identify barriers and facilitators., Results: Eighteen reports from nine studies were included in this review. Women reported barriers to consuming calcium supplements included limited knowledge about calcium supplements and pre-eclampsia, fears and experiences of side effects, varying preferences for tablets, dosing, working schedules, being away from home and taking other supplements. Receiving information regarding pre-eclampsia and safety of calcium supplement use from reliable sources, alternative dosing options, supplement reminders, early antenatal care, free supplements and support from families and communities were reported as facilitators. Healthcare providers felt that consistent messaging about benefits and risks of calcium, training, and ensuring adequate staffing and calcium supply is available would be able to help them in promoting calcium., Conclusion: Relevant stakeholders should consider the identified barriers and facilitators when formulating interventions and policies on calcium supplement use. These review findings can inform implementation to ensure effective and equitable provision and scale-up of calcium interventions., Prospero Registration Number: CRD42021239143., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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164. The health, economic and social burden of smoking in Argentina, and the impact of increasing tobacco taxes in a context of illicit trade.
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Palacios A, Alcaraz A, Casarini A, Rodriguez Cairoli F, Espinola N, Balan D, Perelli L, Augustovski F, Bardach A, and Pichon-Riviere A
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- Humans, Argentina epidemiology, Smoking epidemiology, Taxes, Commerce, Tobacco Products
- Abstract
Tobacco tax increases, the most cost-effective measure in reducing consumption, remain underutilized in low and middle-income countries. This study estimates the health and economic burden of smoking in Argentina and forecasts the benefits of tobacco tax hikes, accounting for the potential effects of illicit trade. Using a probabilistic Markov microsimulation model, this study quantifies smoking-related deaths, health events, and societal costs. The model also estimates the health and economic benefits of different increases in the price of cigarettes through taxes. Annually, smoking causes 45,000 deaths and 221,000 health events in Argentina, costing USD 2782 million in direct medical expenses, USD 1470 million in labor productivity loss costs, and USD 1069 million in informal care costs-totaling 1.2% of the national gross domestic product. Even in a scenario that considers illicit trade of tobacco products, a 50% cigarette price increase through taxes could yield USD 8292 million in total economic benefits accumulated over a decade. Consequently, raising tobacco taxes could significantly reduce the health and economic burdens of smoking in Argentina while increasing fiscal revenue., (© 2023 The Authors. Health Economics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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165. Challenges of calculating cost-effectiveness thresholds - Authors' reply.
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Pichon-Riviere A, Drummond M, Palacios A, Garcia-Marti S, and Augustovski F
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- Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis
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Competing Interests: We declare no competing interests.
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- 2023
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166. Estimating the Effectiveness of Health Warnings on Cigarette Packaging in Nigeria: A Modeling Study.
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Alcaraz A, Adedeji A, Pichón-Riviere A, Amara Ekeruche M, Casarini A, Rodríguez Cairoli F, Espinola N, Roberti J, Palacios A, and Bardach A
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- Humans, Nigeria epidemiology, Product Packaging, Product Labeling, Tobacco Products
- Abstract
Introduction: Tobacco consumption is associated with nearly 30 000 deaths annually in Nigeria alongside other adverse health and economic effects. Our objective was to estimate the health and economic implications of the current cigarette labeling policies (text-only HWs); new health warnings policies in the country (adding graphic health warnings with up to 60% coverage), and plain packaging policy as recommended by the World Health Organization., Aims and Methods: We used a probabilistic state-transition individual microsimulation model, considering natural history, healthcare costs, and quality-of-life losses associated with main tobacco-attributable diseases; and the potential effects of packaging and labeling policies. We used three scenarios: (1) text-only health warnings (HWs) covering 50% of the pack, (2) introduction of graphic HWs of 50% (and later increasing to 80%) of the pack, and (3) plain packaging with HWs covering 80% of the pack., Results: A total of 748 deaths are averted in the current situation; 7478 and 14 208 deaths can be averted with the new policy and with plain packaging, respectively. The number of cardiac, cerebrovascular, and cancer events that could be averted by adopting text and graphic HWs are 3093, 5093, and 1346, respectively; increasing to 5876, 9676, and 2557, respectively, with plain packaging. Up to 251 794 years were lost because of early deaths and disability, and ₦144.6 billion (USD 469 million) in health costs could be saved with HWs covering 50% to 80% of the pack over 10 years. With plain packaging and graphic HWs covering 80% of the package 478,408 years and ₦274.7 billion (USD 895 million) would be saved., Conclusions: The new cigarette labeling policy in Nigeria may yield significant health and economic benefits over 10 years. Moving the current policy to plain packaging can significantly improve these benefits., Implications: The new cigarette labeling policy that Nigeria is implementing should aim to achieve 100% compliance with its current regulation and the logical next step: Plain packaging with large warnings. The present study adds evidence of the potential health effects and cost savings of these levels of implementation, which is valuable for local policymakers., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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167. Publisher Correction: cost-effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: an analysis in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Peru.
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Augustovski F, Bardach A, Santoro A, Rodriguez-Cairoli F, López-Osornio A, Argento F, Havela M, Blumenfeld A, Ballivian J, Solioz G, Capula A, López A, Cejas C, Savedoff W, Palacios A, Rubinstein A, and Pichon-Riviere A
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- 2023
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168. Budget Impact Analysis of the FreeStyle Libre Flash Continuous Glucose Monitoring System ® in Patients with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus with Multiple Daily Insulin Injections in Argentina.
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Palacios A, Rodriguez-Cairoli F, Balan D, Rojas-Roque C, Moreno-López C, Braun B, Augustovski F, Pichon-Riviere A, and Bardach A
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- Humans, Argentina, Costs and Cost Analysis, Insurance, Health, Reimbursement economics, Private Sector, Social Security, Continuous Glucose Monitoring economics, Continuous Glucose Monitoring methods, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 drug therapy, Insulin administration & dosage, Insulin therapeutic use, Health Care Costs
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the budget impact of the potential coverage of FreeStyle Libre Flash Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (FSL) for glycemia monitoring in all type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) patients and in those with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) with multiple daily insulin injections, from the social security and the private third-party payer's perspective in Argentina., Methods: A budget impact model was developed to estimate the cost difference between the self-monitoring of blood glucose (standard of care) and FSL over 5 years. Input parameters were retrieved from local literature complemented by expert opinion. Health care costs were estimated by a micro-costing approach and reported in USD as of April 2022 (1 USD = 113.34 Argentine pesos). One-way sensitivity and scenario analyses were conducted., Results: From a social security third-party payer perspective, the incorporation of FSL was associated with net savings per member per month (PMPM) of $0.026 (Year 1) to $0.097 (Year 5) and net savings PMPM of $0.002 (Year 1) to $0.008 (Year 5) for T1DM and T2DM patients, respectively. Similar findings are reported from the private third-party payer perspective. The budget impact results were more sensitive to the acquisition costs of the FSL and test strips., Conclusion: The potential coverage of FSL in patients with T1DM and T2DM with multiple daily insulin injections could be associated with small financial savings considering current technology acquisition costs (FSL and test strips) for social security and the private sector third-party payers in Argentina., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2023
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169. Determining the efficiency path to universal health coverage: cost-effectiveness thresholds for 174 countries based on growth in life expectancy and health expenditures.
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Pichon-Riviere A, Drummond M, Palacios A, Garcia-Marti S, and Augustovski F
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- Infant, Newborn, Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Delivery of Health Care, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Life Expectancy, Health Expenditures, Universal Health Insurance
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of the efficiency of interventions is paramount to achieving equitable health-care systems. One key barrier to the widespread use of economic evaluations in resource allocation decisions is the absence of a widely accepted method to define cost-effectiveness thresholds to judge whether an intervention is cost-effective in a particular jurisdiction. We aimed to develop a method to estimate cost-effectiveness thresholds on the basis of health expenditures per capita and life expectancy at birth and empirically derive these thresholds for 174 countries., Methods: We developed a conceptual framework to assess how the adoption and coverage of new interventions with a given incremental cost-effectiveness ratio will affect the rate of increase of health expenditures per capita and life expectancy at the population level. The cost-effectiveness threshold can be derived so that the effect of new interventions on the evolution of life expectancy and health expenditure per capita is set within predefined goals. To provide guidance on cost-effectiveness thresholds and secular trends for 174 countries, we projected country-level health expenditure per capita and life expectancy increases by income level based on World Bank data for the period 2010-19., Findings: Cost-effectiveness thresholds per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) ranged between US$87 (Democratic Republic of the Congo) and $95 958 (USA) and were less than 0·5 gross domestic product (GDP) per capita in 96% of low-income countries, 76% of lower-middle-income countries, 31% of upper-middle-income countries, and 26% of high-income countries. Cost-effectiveness thresholds per QALY were less than 1 GDP per capita in 168 (97%) of the 174 countries. Cost-effectiveness thresholds per life-year ranged between $78 and $80 529 and between 0·12 and 1·24 GDP per capita, and were less than 1 GDP per capita in 171 (98%) countries., Interpretation: This approach, based on widely available data, can provide a useful reference for countries using economic evaluations to inform resource-allocation decisions and can enrich international efforts to estimate cost-effectiveness thresholds. Our results show lower thresholds than those currently in use in many countries., Funding: Institute for Clinical Effectiveness and Health Policy (IECS)., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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170. [Burden of disease and economic burden attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El SalvadorCarga de morbidade e econômica atribuível ao consumo de bebidas açucaradas em El Salvador].
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Rodríguez Cairoli F, Guevara Vásquez G, Bardach A, Espinola N, Perelli L, Balan D, Palacios A, Augustovski F, Pichón-Riviere A, and Alcaraz A
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the burden of disease and economic burden attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El Salvador., Methods: A comparative risk model was used to estimate the effects on deaths, health events, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), and direct medical costs attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages., Results: A total of 520 deaths (8 per 100 000 individuals), 214 082 health events (3 220 per 100 000 individuals) and 16 643 DALYs could be attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El Salvador, representing US$69.35 million in direct medical costs for the year 2020. In particular, type 2 diabetes (T2DM) events attributable to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages could represent more than 20% of total T2DM cases in the country., Conclusion: A high number of deaths, events, and costs could be attributed to the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in El Salvador.
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- 2023
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171. Calcium supplementation to prevent pre-eclampsia: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis, network meta-analysis and health economic evaluation.
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Rocha T, Allotey J, Palacios A, Vogel JP, Smits L, Carroli G, Mistry H, Young T, Qureshi ZP, Cormick G, Snell KIE, Abalos E, Pena-Rosas JP, Khan KS, Larbi KK, Thorson A, Singata-Madliki M, Hofmeyr GJ, Bohren M, Riley R, Betran AP, and Thangaratinam S
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Calcium therapeutic use, Calcium, Dietary, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Dietary Supplements, Network Meta-Analysis, Pre-Eclampsia prevention & control
- Abstract
Introduction: Low dietary calcium intake is a risk factor for pre-eclampsia, a major contributor to maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity worldwide. Calcium supplementation can prevent pre-eclampsia in women with low dietary calcium. However, the optimal dose and timing of calcium supplementation are not known. We plan to undertake an individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis of randomised trials to determine the effects of various calcium supplementation regimens in preventing pre-eclampsia and its complications and rank these by effectiveness. We also aim to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of calcium supplementation to prevent pre-eclampsia., Methods and Analysis: We will identify randomised trials on calcium supplementation before and during pregnancy by searching major electronic databases including Embase, CINAHL, MEDLINE, CENTRAL, PubMed, Scopus, AMED, LILACS, POPLINE, AIM, IMSEAR, ClinicalTrials.gov and the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, without language restrictions, from inception to February 2022. Primary researchers of the identified trials will be invited to join the International Calcium in Pregnancy Collaborative Network and share their IPD. We will check each study's IPD for consistency with the original authors before standardising and harmonising the data. We will perform a series of one-stage and two-stage IPD random-effect meta-analyses to obtain the summary intervention effects on pre-eclampsia with 95% CIs and summary treatment-covariate interactions (maternal risk status, dietary intake, timing of intervention, daily dose of calcium prescribed and total intake of calcium). Heterogeneity will be summarised using tau
2 , I2 and 95% prediction intervals for effect in a new study. Sensitivity analysis to explore robustness of statistical and clinical assumptions will be carried out. Minor study effects (potential publication bias) will be investigated using funnel plots. A decision analytical model for use in low-income and middle-income countries will assess the cost-effectiveness of calcium supplementation to prevent pre-eclampsia., Ethics and Dissemination: No ethical approvals are required. We will store the data in a secure repository in an anonymised format. The results will be published in peer-reviewed journals., Prospero Registration Number: CRD42021231276., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© World Health Organization 2023. Licensee BMJ.)- Published
- 2023
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172. A Systematic Review of Health Economic Evaluations and Budget Impact Analyses to Inform Healthcare Decision-Making in Central America.
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Rojas-Roque C and Palacios A
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- Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Health Policy, Central America, Health Promotion, Health Care Costs
- Abstract
Background: Little is known about the quality, quantity and disease areas analysed by health economic research that inform healthcare decision-making in Central America. This study aimed to review the existing health economic evaluations (HEEs) and budget impact analyses (BIAs) evidence in Central America based on scope and reporting quality., Methods: HEEs and BIAs published from 2000 to April 2021 were searched in five electronic databases: PubMed, Embase, LILACS (Latin American and Caribbean Health Science Literature), EconLIT and OVID Global Health. Two reviewers assessed titles, abstracts and full texts of studies for eligibility. The quality appraisal for the reporting was based on La Torre and colleagues' version of the Drummond checklist and the ISPOR good practices for BIA. For each country, we correlated the number of studies by disease area with their respective burden of disease to identify under-researched health areas., Results: 102 publications were eligible for this review. Ninety-four publications reported a HEE, six publications reported a BIA, and two studies reported both a HEE and a BIA. Costa Rica had the highest number of publications (n = 28, 27.5%), followed by Guatemala (n = 25, 24.5%). Cancer and respiratory infections were the most common types of disease studied. Diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney diseases, and mental disorders were under-researched relative to their disease burden in most of the countries. The overall mean quality reporting score for HEE and BIA studies were 71/119 points (60%) and 7/10 points (70%), respectively; however, these assessments were made on different scales., Conclusion: In Central America, health economic research is sparse and is considered as suboptimal quality for reporting. The findings reported information useful to other low- and middle-income countries with similar advances in the application of economics to promote health policy decision-making., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2023
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173. Cost-effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: an analysis in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Peru.
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Augustovski F, Bardach A, Santoro A, Rodriguez-Cairoli F, López-Osornio A, Argento F, Havela M, Blumenfeld A, Ballivian J, Solioz G, Capula A, López A, Cejas C, Savedoff W, Palacios A, Rubinstein A, and Pichon-Riviere A
- Abstract
Objective: Our study analyzes the cost-effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccination campaigns in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Peru., Methods: Using a previously published SVEIR model, we analyzed the impact of a vaccination campaign (2021) from a national healthcare perspective. The primary outcomes were quality adjusted life years (QALYs) lost and total costs. Other outcomes included COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, deaths, and life years. We applied a discount rate of 3% for health outcomes. We modeled a realistic vaccination campaign in each country (the realistic country-specific campaign). Additionally, we assessed a standard campaign (similar, "typical" for all countries), and an optimized campaign (similar in all countries with higher but plausible population coverage). One-way deterministic sensitivity analyses were performed., Findings: Vaccination was health improving as well as cost-saving in almost all countries and scenarios. Our analysis shows that vaccination in this group of countries prevented 573,141 deaths (508,826 standard; 685,442 optimized) and gained 5.07 million QALYs (4.53 standard; 6.03 optimized). Despite the incremental costs of vaccination campaigns, they had a total net cost saving to the health system of US$16.29 billion (US$16.47 standard; US$18.58 optimized). The realistic (base case) vaccination campaign in Chile was the only scenario, which was not cost saving, but it was still highly cost-effective with an ICER of US$22 per QALY gained. Main findings were robust in the sensitivity analyses., Interpretation: The COVID-19 vaccination campaign in seven Latin American and Caribbean countries -that comprise nearly 80% of the region- was beneficial for population health and was also cost-saving or highly cost-effective., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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174. Budget impact analysis of the freestyle libre flash continuous glucose monitoring system® in patients with diabetes mellitus type 1 in Chile.
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Palacios A, Rodriguez Cairoli F, Balan D, Balmaceda C, Augustovski F, Pichon-Riviere A, and Bardach A
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- Humans, Blood Glucose, Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring, Chile, Health Care Costs, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the budget impact of covering the FreeStyle Libre Flash Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (FSL) for type 1 Diabetes Mellitus patients (T1DM), compared to self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG), from the perspective of public and private third-party payers in Chile., Methods: A budget impact model was developed to estimate the cost difference between SMBG and FSL over five years. Two FSL coverage schemes were assessed. Input parameters were retrieved from the literature review and complemented by expert opinion. Healthcare costs were estimated by a micro-costing approach and reported in USD., Results: For a public sector third-party payer, incorporating FSL implied a cost increase up to USD 0.013 per member per month (PMPM) for the fifth year under the broad coverage scheme and a net saving of 0.0001 PMPM (all years) under the restricted coverage scheme. From a private sector third-party payer, incorporating FSL implied savings up to USD 0.028 PMPM (fifth year) for the broad coverage scheme and up to USD 0.012 PMPM (fifth year) for the restricted scheme., Conclusion: Incorporating the FSL for T1DM patients was associated with a marginal incremental cost for the public sector third-party payer and cost savings in Chile's private healthcare sector.
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- 2023
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175. The burden of disease and economic impact of sugar-sweetened beverages' consumption in Argentina: A modeling study.
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Bardach AE, Espínola N, Cairoli FR, Perelli L, Balan D, Palacios A, Augustovski F, Pichón-Riviere A, and Alcaraz AO
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- Adult, Child, Adolescent, Humans, Overweight etiology, Overweight complications, Argentina epidemiology, Beverages adverse effects, Obesity epidemiology, Obesity etiology, Health Care Costs, Cost of Illness, Sugar-Sweetened Beverages adverse effects, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Cardiovascular Diseases complications
- Abstract
Background: Approximately two-thirds of Argentine adults are overweight or obese, and 11% have diabetes. Over the last two decades, all population groups have increased their consumption of ultra-processed foods and sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB). We aimed to estimate the disease burden-deaths, events, and costs to the health system-attributed to SSB consumption in Argentina., Methods: We used a comparative risk assessment framework to estimate the health and economic impacts that would be avoided in a scenario without sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption. We calculated the direct effects on diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and BMI, and then estimated the effects of BMI on disease incidence. Finally, we applied the population attributable factor to calculate the health and economic burden avoided in Argentina in 2020., Results: Our model estimated that about 4,425 deaths, 110,000 healthy life years lost to premature death and disability, more than 520,000 cases of overweight and obesity in adults, and 774,000 in children and adolescents would be attributed to SSB Consumption in Argentina. This disease burden corresponds to 23% of type-2 diabetes cases and other significant proportions of cardiovascular disease and cancer. The overweight and obesity costs attributable to SSB totaled approximately $47 million in adults and $15 million in children and adolescents., Conclusion: A significant number of disease cases, deaths, and health care costs could be attributed to SSB consumption in Argentina. Implementing measures to reduce the sugar content in beverages is a pending debt for the country and could lead to measurable improvements in population health, especially among children and adolescents., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Bardach et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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176. Health and economic burden of disease of sugar-sweetened beverage consumption in four Latin American and Caribbean countries: a modelling study.
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Alcaraz A, Bardach AE, Espinola N, Perelli L, Rodriguez Cairoli F, La Foucade A, de Mello Vianna CM, Guevara G, Gittens-Baynes KA, Johns P, Beharry V, Balán DJ, Palacios A, Augustovski F, and Pichon-Riviere A
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- Adult, Child, Adolescent, Humans, Latin America, Overweight, Cost of Illness, Beverages, Sugar-Sweetened Beverages adverse effects, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology, Pediatric Obesity
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Objective: Overweight and obesity are important contributors to the non-communicable disease burden. The consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) has been associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), cardiovascular disease, cancer and other conditions. The objective of this study was to estimate the burden of disease attributable to the consumption of SSBs and the costs to the healthcare systems in Argentina, Brazil, El Salvador, and Trinidad and Tobago., Design: Following a systematic review of models, a comparative risk assessment framework was developed to estimate the health and economic impact associated with the consumption of SSBs., Setting: Argentina, Brazil, El Salvador, and Trinidad and Tobago., Participants: Overall population., Primary and Secondary Outcome Measures: The model estimated the effects of SSB consumption on health through two causal pathways: one mediated by body mass index (BMI) and health conditions associated with BMI and another that reflected the independent effects of SSB consumption on T2DM and cardiovascular diseases., Results: The model results indicated that for all four countries, in 1 year, SSB consumption was associated with 18 000 deaths (3.2% of the total disease-related deaths), seven million disease events (3.3% of the total disease-related events), a half-million DALYs and US$2 billion in direct medical costs. This included 1.5 million cases of overweight and obesity in children/adolescents (12% of the excess weight cases) and 2.8 million cases in adults (2.8%); 2.2 million cases of type 2 diabetes (19%); 200 000 cases of heart disease (3.8%); 124 000 strokes (3.9%); 116 000 cases of musculoskeletal disease (0.2%); 102 000 cases of kidney disease (0.9%); and 45 000 episodes of asthma (0.4%). The Trinidad and Tobago population were the most affected by disease events., Conclusions: The study results indicate that the consumption of SSBs is associated with a significant burden of disease and death in Latin America and the Caribbean., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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177. Making visible the cost of informal caregivers' time in Latin America: a case study for major cardiovascular, cancer and respiratory diseases in eight countries.
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Espinola N, Pichon-Riviere A, Casarini A, Alcaraz A, Bardach A, Williams C, Rodriguez Cairoli F, Augustovski F, and Palacios A
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- Humans, Cardiovascular Diseases therapy, Latin America, Neoplasms therapy, Costs and Cost Analysis, Pneumonia therapy, Time Factors, Caregivers economics, Patient Care economics, Patient Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Informal care is a key element of health care and well-being for society, yet it is scarcely visible and rarely studied in health economic evaluations. This study aims to estimate the time use and cost associated with informal care for cardiovascular diseases, pneumonia and ten different cancers in eight Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru)., Methods: We carried out an exhaustive literature review on informal caregivers' time use, focusing on the selected diseases. We developed a survey for professional caregivers and conducted expert interviews to validate this data in the local context. We used an indirect estimate through the interpolation of the available data, for those cases in which we do not found reliable information. We used the proxy good method to estimate the monetary value of the use of time of informal care. National household surveys databases were processed to obtain the average wage per hour of a proxy of informal caregiver. Estimates were expressed in 2020 US dollars., Results: The study estimated approximately 1,900 million hours of informal care annually and $ 4,300 million per year in average informal care time cost for these fifteen diseases and eight countries analyzed. Cardiovascular diseases accounted for an informal care burden that ranged from 374 to 555 h per year, while cancers varied from 512 to 1,825 h per year. The informal care time cost share on GDP varied from 0.26% (Mexico) to 1.38% (Brazil), with an average of 0.82% in the studied American countries. Informal care time cost represents between 16 and 44% of the total economic cost (direct medical and informal care cost) associated with health conditions., Conclusions: The study shows that there is a significant informal care economic burden -frequently overlooked- in different chronic and acute diseases in Latin American countries; and highlights the relevance of including the economic value of informal care in economic evaluations of healthcare., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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178. What does our region need in order to strengthen public policies on sugar-sweetened beverages? decision-makers' dialogue.
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Alcaraz A, Perelli L, Rodriguez MB, Palacios A, Bardach A, Gittens-Baynes KA, Vianna C, Guevara G, García-Martí S, Ciapponi A, Augustovski F, Belizán M, and Pichon-Riviere A
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- Humans, Decision Making, Argentina, Food Industry, Sugar-Sweetened Beverages, Public Policy
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In order to prioritize public policies to reduce the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in Argentina, Brazil, El Salvador and Trinidad and Tobago and to identify information gaps related to the burden of disease attributable to their consumption, a policy dialogue was held with government members, civil society organizations, researchers and communicators from Latin American and Caribbean countries. Presentations and deliberative workshops were conducted using semi-structured data collection tools and group discussions. The prioritized interventions were tax increases, front labeling, restriction of advertising, promotion and sponsorship, and modifications regarding the school environment. The main perceived barrier was the interference from the food industry. This dialogue among decision-makers led to the identification of priority public policies to reduce the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in the region.
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- 2023
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179. Social vulnerability, exposure to environmental risk factors, and accessibility of healthcare services: Evidence from 2,000+ informal settlements in Argentina.
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Palacios A, Gabosi J, Williams CR, and Rojas-Roque C
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- Argentina epidemiology, Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Poverty Areas, Risk Factors, Urban Population, Industrial Waste, Social Vulnerability
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Globally, the question of how to improve the living standards of the inhabitants of informal settlements is a key political concern. These neighborhoods are characterized by economic vulnerability, social marginalization, and inaccessibility of basic services. The aim of this study is to provide evidence about the environmental risk factors faced by these populations in Argentina, and to identify whether their greater exposure to risk factors is associated with greater accessibility of healthcare services. We analyzed an original database that provides information about basic characteristics of the neighborhood, environmental risk factors (proximity to garbage dumps, industrial waste, and high-voltage towers), and accessibility of basic healthcare services on over 2000 informal settlements in Argentina. We calculated descriptive statistics and developed multivariate econometric models to estimate the probability of accessibility of healthcare services. On average, 31% of informal settlements were close to a garbage dump, 19% were close to a high-voltage tower, and 10% were close to industrial waste. In addition, 39% of these neighborhoods do not have a healthcare center nearby, 65% do not have an accessible hospital, and 39% are not consistently served by ambulances in the event of an emergency. The econometric estimates suggest that the accessibility of hospital healthcare service and to an ambulance service is positively associated with the age of the neighborhood, and whether the neighborhood is a slum, but there is no evidence of association with the exposure to environmental risk factors. In short, the populations living in informal settlements in Argentina are exposed to harmful environmental risk factors. Access to basic healthcare services is limited and does not reflect the elevated exposure to environmental risks. Health, environmental, and economic dimensions should be considered when designing and implementing public policies for vulnerable populations., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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180. Cost-effectiveness of a centrifugal-flow pump for patients with advanced heart failure in Argentina.
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Alcaraz A, Pichon-Riviere A, Rojas-Roque C, González JM, Prina D, Solioz G, Augustovski F, and Palacios A
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- Argentina epidemiology, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Heart Failure therapy, Quality of Life
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Background: Centrifugal-flow pumps are novel treatment options for patients with advanced heart failure (HF). This study estimated the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of centrifugal-flow pumps for patients with advanced HF in Argentina., Methods: Two Markov models were developed to estimate the cost-effectiveness of a centrifugal-flow pump as destination therapy (DT) in patients with contraindication for heart transplantation, and as bridge-to-transplant (BTT), with a lifetime horizon using the third-party payer Social Security (SS) and Private Sector (PS) perspectives. Clinical, epidemiological, and quality-adjusted life years (QALY) parameters were retrieved from the literature. Direct medical costs were estimated through a micro-costing approach (exchange rate USD 1 = ARS 59.95)., Results: The centrifugal-flow pump as a DT increased the per patient QALYs by 3.5 and costs by ARS 8.1 million in both the SS and PS, with an ICER of ARS 2.3 million per QALY. Corresponding values for a centrifugal-flow pump as BTT were 0.74 QALYs and more than ARS 8 million, yielding ICERs of ARS 11 million per QALY (highly dependent on waiting times). For the 1, 3, and 5 GDP per QALY thresholds, the probability of a centrifugal-flow pump to be cost-effective for DT/BTT was around 2%/0%, 40%/0%, and 80%/1%, respectively., Conclusion: The centrifugal-flow pump prolongs life and improves the quality of life at significantly higher costs. As in Argentina there is no current explicit cost-effectiveness threshold, the final decision on reimbursement will depend on the willingness to pay in each subsector. Nevertheless, the centrifugal-flow pump as a DT was more cost-effective than as a BTT., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2022
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181. Fortification of staple foods with calcium: a novel costing tool to inform decision making.
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Palacios A, Rojas-Roque C, Balan D, Sosa Estani I, Belizán JM, Cormick G, and Augustovski F
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- Calcium, Dietary, Child, Decision Making, Diet, Humans, Calcium, Food, Fortified
- Abstract
Low calcium intake and its impact on maternal and child health are a major concern in low- and middle-income countries. Given the low calcium in diet, as well as the low adherence and acceptability of calcium pills in those settings, the discussion about policies to increase calcium intake has moved toward staple food fortification strategies. Nevertheless, there is scarce information on the economic feasibility of implementing these strategies. We aimed to design and propose a novel costing tool to estimate the cost of the flour fortification with calcium by carrying out a literature review about costing studies for staple food fortification programs and costing tools previously developed. A deliberative meeting with stakeholders was held to discuss and face-validate the conceptual framework proposed. We showed the costing tool application for the case of Costa Rica (a country with a population with low calcium intake), including the absolute cost of the staple food fortification production process, the incremental cost of fortification according to the public/private sector, and the incremental cost by target population. This open-source and publicly available costing tool can be useful to inform policymaking in countries considering the implementation of staple food fortification programs., (© 2022 New York Academy of Sciences.)
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- 2022
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182. The estimated benefits of increasing cigarette prices through taxation on the burden of disease and economic burden of smoking in Nigeria: A modeling study.
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Bardach A, Casarini A, Rodriguez Cairoli F, Adeniran A, Castradori M, Akanonu P, Onyekwena C, Espinola N, Pichon-Riviere A, and Palacios A
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- Commerce, Cost of Illness, Humans, Nigeria epidemiology, Smoking epidemiology, Taxes, Financial Stress, Tobacco Products
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Background: Globally, tobacco consumption continues to cause a considerable burden of preventable diseases. Although the smoking prevalence in Nigeria may be declining over the last years, the absolute number of active smokers remains one of the highest in Africa. Little is known about the disease burden and economic costs of cigarette smoking in Nigeria. Consequently, there is an evidence gap to inform the design and implementation of an effective policy for tobacco control., Methods: We applied a microsimulation model to estimate the burden attributable to smoking in terms of morbidity, mortality, disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), and direct medical costs and indirect costs (e.g., productivity loss costs, informal caregivers' costs). We also modeled the health and economic impact of different scenarios of tobacco price increases through taxes., Results: We estimated that smoking is responsible for approximately 29,000 annual deaths in Nigeria. This burden corresponds to 816,230 DALYs per year. In 2019, the total economic burden attributable to tobacco was estimated at ₦ 634 billion annually (approximately U$D 2.07 billion). If tobacco cigarettes' prices were to be raised by 50% through taxes, more than 30,000 deaths from smoking-attributable diseases would be averted in 10 years, with subsequent savings on direct and indirect costs of ₦597 billion and increased tax revenue collection of ₦369 billion., Conclusion: In Nigeria, tobacco is responsible for substantial health and economic burden. Increasing tobacco taxes could reduce this burden and produce net economic benefits., Competing Interests: NO authors have competing interests
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- 2022
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183. Estándares Consolidados de Reporte de Evaluaciones Económicas Sanitarias: adaptación al español de la lista de comprobación CHEERS 2022.
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Augustovski F, García Martí S, Espinoza MA, Palacios A, Husereau D, and Pichon-Riviere A
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Checklist
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Objectives: Health economic evaluations (HEEs) are comparative analyses of courses of action in terms of both costs and consequences. The Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) original version and its adaptation to Spanish were published in 2013. Its objectives were to promote that the HEEs are identifiable, interpretable, and useful for decision making and serve as a reporting guide. The new CHEERS 2022 replaces the previous one and tries to be more easily applied to any HEE and incorporates recent methodological advances and the importance of stakeholder involvement including patients and the general public., Methods: For the present adaptation, the following stages were followed: (1) independent translations of the original list into Spanish, (2) blind back-translations, (3) evaluation of their quality, (4) preparation of a new version in Spanish, (5) review and improvement by the author team, (6) preparation of a new version in Spanish, (7) distribution of the preliminary Spanish version and the original one to the American HTA Network (Red de las Américas de Evaluación de Tecnologías Sanitarias) and Spanish-speaking experts for evaluation and feedback, (8) monitoring of changes to the original list under peer review at BritishMedicalJournal, and (9) consolidation of the final adaptation of the Spanish CHEERS 2022 checklist., Results: In this article, we detail the process and the Spanish adaptation of the 28-item CHEERS 2022 checklist and its recommendations., Conclusions: This list is intended for researchers reporting HEE in peer-reviewed journals and reviewers, editors, and, among others, health technology assessment bodies., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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184. Positive modulation of the TMEM16B mediated currents by TRPV4 antagonist.
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Hernandez A, Alaniz-Palacios A, Contreras-Vite JA, and Martínez-Torres A
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Calcium-activated chloride channels (CaCCs) play important roles in many physiological processes and their malfunction is implicated in diverse pathologies such as cancer, asthma, and hypertension. TMEM16A and TMEM16B proteins are the structural components of the CaCCs. Recent studies in cell cultures and animal models have demonstrated that pharmacological inhibition of CaCCs could be helpful in the treatment of some diseases, however, there are few specific modulators of these channels. CaCCs and Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid-4 (TRPV4) channels are co-expressed in some tissues where they functionally interact. TRPV4 is activated by different stimuli and forms a calcium permeable channel that is activated by GSK1016790A and antagonized by GSK2193874. Here we report that GSK2193874 enhances the chloride currents mediated by TMEM16B expressed in HEK cells at nanomolar concentrations and that GSK1016790A enhances native CaCCs of Xenopus oocytes. Thus, these compounds may be used as a tool for the study of CaCCs, TRPV4 and their interactions., (© 2021 The Authors.)
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- 2021
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185. Cost-effectiveness of a Multicomponent Intervention for Hypertension Control in Low-Income Settings in Argentina.
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Zhang Y, Yin L, Mills K, Chen J, He J, Palacios A, Riviere AP, Irazola V, Augustovski F, and Shi L
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- Argentina, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Humans, Hypertension economics, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Economic, Poverty, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Treatment Outcome, Health Promotion economics, Hypertension therapy
- Abstract
Importance: Hypertension is highly prevalent in low- and middle-income countries, and it is an important preventable risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Understanding the economic benefits of a hypertension control program is valuable to decision-makers., Objective: To evaluate the long-term cost-effectiveness of a multicomponent hypertension management program compared with usual care among patients with hypertension receiving care in public clinics in Argentina from a health care system perspective., Design, Setting, and Participants: This economic evaluation used a Markov model to estimate the cost-effectiveness of a hypertension management program among adult patients with uncontrolled hypertension in a low-income setting. Patient-level data (743 individuals for multicomponent intervention; 689 for usual care) from the Hypertension Control Program in Argentina trial (HCPIA) were used to estimate treatment effects and the risk of CVD. Three health states were included in each strategy: (1) low risk of CVD, (2) high risk of CVD, and (3) death. The total time horizon was the lifetime, and each cycle lasted 6 months., Main Outcomes and Measures: Model inputs were based on trial data and other published sources. Cost and utilities were discounted at a rate of 5% annually. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) between the multicomponent intervention and usual care was calculated using the difference in costs in 2017 international dollars (INT $) divided by the difference in effectiveness in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). One-way sensitivity analysis and probabilistic sensitivity analysis were performed to assess the uncertainty and robustness of the results., Results: In the original trial, the 743 participants in the intervention group (349 [47.0%] men) had a mean (SD) age of 56.2 (12.0) years, and the 689 participants in the control group (311 [45.1%] men) had a mean (SD) age of 56.2 (11.7) years. In the base-case analysis, the HCPIA program yielded 8.42 discounted QALYs and accrued INT $3096 discounted costs, while usual care yielded 8.29 discounted QALYs and accrued INT $2473 discounted costs. The ICER for the HCPIA program was INT $4907/QALY gained. The model results remained robust in sensitivity analyses, and the model was most sensitive to parameters of program costs., Conclusions and Relevance: In this study, the HCPIA multicomponent intervention vs usual care was a cost-effective strategy to improve hypertension management and reduce the risk of associated CVD among patients with hypertension who received services at public clinics in Argentina. This intervention program is likely transferable to other settings in Argentina or other lower- and middle-income countries.
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- 2021
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186. Sugar sweetened beverages attributable disease burden and the potential impact of policy interventions: a systematic review of epidemiological and decision models.
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Alcaraz A, Pichon-Riviere A, Palacios A, Bardach A, Balan DJ, Perelli L, Augustovski F, and Ciapponi A
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- Beverages adverse effects, Child, Humans, Overweight, Policy, Taxes, Cost of Illness, Sugar-Sweetened Beverages
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Background: Around 184,000 deaths per year could be attributable to sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) consumption worldwide. Epidemiological and decision models are important tools to estimate disease burden. The purpose of this study was to identify models to assess the burden of diseases attributable to SSBs consumption or the potential impact of health interventions., Methods: We carried out a systematic review and literature search up to August 2018. Pairs of reviewers independently selected, extracted, and assessed the quality of the included studies through an exhaustive description of each model's features. Discrepancies were solved by consensus. The inclusion criteria were epidemiological or decision models evaluating SSBs health interventions or policies, and descriptive SSBs studies of decision models. Studies published before 2003, cost of illness studies and economic evaluations based on individual patient data were excluded., Results: We identified a total of 2766 references. Out of the 40 included studies, 45% were models specifically developed to address SSBs, 82.5% were conducted in high-income countries and 57.5% considered a health system perspective. The most common model's outcomes were obesity/overweight (82.5%), diabetes (72.5%), cardiovascular disease (60%), mortality (52.5%), direct medical costs (57.35%), and healthy years -DALYs/QALYs- (40%) attributable to SSBs. 67.5% of the studies modelled the effect of SSBs on the outcomes either entirely through BMI or through BMI plus diabetes independently. Models were usually populated with inputs from national surveys -such us obesity prevalence, SSBs consumption-; and vital statistics (67.5%). Only 55% reported results by gender and 40% included children; 30% presented results by income level, and 25% by selected vulnerable groups. Most of the models evaluated at least one policy intervention to reduce SSBs consumption (92.5%), taxes being the most frequent strategy (75%)., Conclusions: There is a wide range of modelling approaches of different complexity and information requirements to evaluate the burden of disease attributable to SSBs. Most of them take into account the impact on obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease, mortality, and economic impact. Incorporating these tools to different countries could result in useful information for decision makers and the general population to promote a deeper implementation of policies to reduce SSBs consumption., Prospero Protocol Number: CRD42020121025 ., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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187. Improving the monitoring of chronic heart failure in Argentina: is the implantable pulmonary artery pressure with CardioMEMS Heart Failure System cost-effective?
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Alcaraz A, Rojas-Roque C, Prina D, González JM, Pichon-Riviere A, Augustovski F, and Palacios A
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Background: The CardioMEMS® sensor is a wireless pulmonary artery pressure device used for monitoring symptomatic heart failure (HF). The use of CardioMEMS was associated with a reduction of hospitalizations of HF patients, but the acquisition cost could be high in low-and-middle income countries. Evidence of cost-effectiveness is needed to help decision-makers to allocate resources according to "value for money". This study is aimed at estimating the cost-effectiveness of CardioMEMS used in HF patients from the third-party payer perspective -Social Security (SS) and Private Sector (PS)- in Argentina., Methods: A Markov model was developed to estimate the cost-effectiveness of CardioMEMS versus usual medical care over a lifetime horizon. The model was applied to a hypothetical population of patients with HF functional class III with at least one hospitalization in the previous 12 months. The main outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). To populate the model we retrieved clinical, epidemiological and utility parameters from the literature, whilst direct medical costs were estimated through a micro-costing approach (exchange rate USD 1 = ARS 76.95). Uncertainties in all parameters were assessed by deterministic, probabilistic and scenario sensitivity analysis., Results: Compared with the usual medical care, CardioMEMS increased quality-adjusted life years (QALY) by 0.37 and increased costs per patient by ARS 1,081,703 for SS and ARS 919,051 for PS. The resultant ICER was ARS 2,937,756 per QALY and ARS 2,496,015 per QALY for SS and PS, respectively. ICER was most sensitive to the hazard ratio of HF hospital admission and the acquisition price of CardioMEMS. The probability that CardioMEMS is cost-effective at one (ARS 700,473), three (ARS 2,101,419,) and five (ARS 3,502,363) Gross Domestic Product per capita is 0.6, 17.9 and 64.1% for SS and 5.4, 33.3 and 73.2% for PS., Conclusions: CardioMEMS was more effective and more costly than usual care in class III HF patients. Since in Argentina there is no current explicit threshold, the final decision to determine its cost-effectiveness will depend on the willingness-to-pay for QALYs in each health subsector., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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188. Direct Medical Costs, Productivity Loss Costs and Out-Of-Pocket Expenditures in Women with Breast Cancer in Latin America and the Caribbean: A Systematic Review.
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Palacios A, Rojas-Roque C, González L, Bardach A, Ciapponi A, Peckaitis C, Pichon-Riviere A, and Augustovski F
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- Caribbean Region, Efficiency, Female, Health Expenditures, Humans, Latin America, Breast Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Our objective was to conduct a systematic review of the literature to identify, categorise, assess, and synthesise the healthcare costs of patients with breast cancer (BC) and their relatives in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)., Methods: In December 2020, we searched for published data in PubMed, LILACS, EMBASE, and other sources, including the grey literature. Studies were eligible if they were conducted in LAC and reported the direct medical costs, productivity loss costs, out-of-pocket expenditure, and other costs to patients with BC and their relatives. No restrictions were imposed on the type of BC population (metastatic BC or human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive/negative BC, among others). We summarised the characteristics and methodological approach of each study and the healthcare costs by cancer stage. We also developed and applied an original ad hoc instrument to assess the quality of the cost estimation studies., Results: We identified 2725 references and 63 included studies. In total, 79.3% of the studies solely reported direct medical costs and five solely reported costs to patients and their relatives. Only 14.3% of the studies were classified as of high quality. The pooled weighted average direct medical cost per patient-year (year 2020 international dollars [I$]) by BC stage was I$13,179 for stage I, I$15,556 for stage II, I$23,444 for stage III, and I$28,910 for stage IV., Conclusion: This review provides the first synthesis of BC costs in LAC. Our findings show few high-quality costing studies in BC and a gap in the literature measuring costs to patients and their relatives. The high costs associated with the advanced stages of BC call into question the affordability of treatments and their accessibility for patients. Registered in PROSPERO (CRD42018106835).
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- 2021
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189. The health and economic burden of smoking in 12 Latin American countries and the potential effect of increasing tobacco taxes: an economic modelling study.
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Pichon-Riviere A, Alcaraz A, Palacios A, Rodríguez B, Reynales-Shigematsu LM, Pinto M, Castillo-Riquelme M, Peña Torres E, Osorio DI, Huayanay L, Loza Munarriz C, de Miera-Juárez BS, Gallegos-Rivero V, De La Puente C, Del Pilar Navia-Bueno M, Caporale J, Roberti J, Virgilio SA, Augustovski F, and Bardach A
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- Humans, Latin America epidemiology, Markov Chains, Models, Economic, Taxes statistics & numerical data, Tobacco Products statistics & numerical data, Cost of Illness, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Smoking economics, Smoking epidemiology, Taxes economics, Tobacco Products economics
- Abstract
Background: Worldwide, smoking tobacco causes 7 million deaths annually, and this toll is expected to increase, especially in low-income and middle-income countries. In Latin America, smoking is a leading risk factor for death and disability, contributes to poverty, and imposes an economic burden on health systems. Despite being one of the most effective measures to reduce smoking, tobacco taxation is underused and cigarettes are more affordable in Latin America than in other regions. Our aim was to estimate the tobacco-attributable burden on mortality, disease incidence, quality of life lost, and medical costs in 12 Latin American countries, and the expected health and economic effects of increasing tobacco taxes., Methods: In this modelling study, we developed a Markov probabilistic microsimulation economic model of the natural history, medical costs, and quality-of-life losses associated with the most common tobacco-related diseases in 12 countries in Latin America. Data inputs were obtained through a literature review, vital statistics, and hospital databases from each country: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Honduras, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay. The main outcomes of the model are life-years, quality-adjusted life-years, disease events, hospitalisations, disease incidence, disease cost, and healthy years of life lost. We estimated direct medical costs for each tobacco-related disease included in the model using a common costing methodology for each country. The disease burden was estimated as the difference in disease events, deaths, and associated costs between the results predicted by the model for current smoking prevalence and a hypothetical cohort of people in each country who had never smoked. The model estimates the health and financial effects of a price increase of cigarettes through taxes, in terms of disease and health-care costs averted, and increased tax revenues., Findings: In the 12 Latin American countries analysed, we estimated that smoking is responsible for approximately 345 000 (12%) of the total 2 860 921 adult deaths, 2·21 million disease events, 8·77 million healthy years of life lost, and $26·9 billion in direct medical costs annually. Health-care costs attributable to smoking were estimated to represent 6·9% of the health budgets of these countries, equivalent to 0·6% of their gross domestic product. Tax revenues from cigarette sales cover 36·0% of the estimated health expenditures caused by smoking. We estimated that a 50% increase in cigarette price through taxation would avert more than 300 000 deaths, 1·3 million disease events, gain 9 million healthy life-years, and save $26·7 billion in health-care costs in the next 10 years, with a total economic benefit of $43·7 billion., Interpretation: Smoking represents a substantial health and economic burden in these 12 countries of Latin America. Tobacco tax increases could successfully avert deaths and disability, reduce health-care spending, and increase tax revenues, resulting in large net economic benefits., Funding: International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada., (Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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190. Need and inequality in the use of health care services in a fragmented and decentralized health system: evidence for Argentina.
- Author
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Palacios A, Espinola N, and Rojas-Roque C
- Subjects
- Adult, Argentina epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Medical Assistance organization & administration, Public Health, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Healthcare Disparities statistics & numerical data, Income statistics & numerical data, Universal Health Insurance organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: The high fragmentation and decentralization in the provision of health care services that characterizes Argentina's health system, as well as the economic and social inequalities, challenge the achievement of the Universal Health Coverage (UHC). The objective of this study is to measure socioeconomic-related inequality and horizontal inequity in the use of health care services in Argentina as well as identify the factors that contribute to these disparities., Methods: The 2013 National Risk Factor Survey, developed by the Ministry of Health of Argentina, was used to measure socioeconomic-related inequality and inequity in the use of health care services through concentration curves, the Erreygers concentration index, and the index of horizontal inequity. Econometric micro-decomposition was applied to estimate the contribution of each determining factor to inequality in the use of health care services., Results: The Erreygers concentration index for the use of health care services was 0.1223, evidencing pro-rich inequalities. By adding variables of health care needs, the horizontal inequity index was 0.1296. Non-need factors such as education and health coverage with social security increase pro-rich inequality., Conclusions: The Argentine health system shows pro-rich inequality in the use of health care services. It is necessary to design strategies to improve articulation between the three coverage subsectors and national, provincial, and municipal governments to keep the commitment of "not leaving anyone behind." The results showed here could provide lessons for countries with similar contexts and challenges in public health.
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- 2020
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191. The Cost-Effectiveness of Continuous Versus Intermittent Renal Replacement Therapies in Acute Kidney Injury: Perspective of the Social Services for the Elderly in Argentina.
- Author
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Garay OU, Palacios A, Pichon-Riviere A, Augustovski F, Martí SG, Hernández-Vásquez A, López ET, Rosa-Díez G, and Bardach A
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- Acute Kidney Injury therapy, Aged, Argentina, Cost Savings economics, Cost Savings methods, Cost Savings statistics & numerical data, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Markov Chains, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Social Work statistics & numerical data, Treatment Outcome, Acute Kidney Injury economics, Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy economics, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Intermittent Renal Replacement Therapy economics, Social Work economics
- Abstract
Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a public health problem that affects millions of hospitalized patients worldwide. In Argentina, evidence suggests that its incidence has risen in recent years. When severe, AKI may require a renal replacement therapy (RRT) where continuous RRT (CRRT) and intermittent RRT (IRRT) are plausible options for patients in the intensive care unit., Objective: To evaluate the cost utility of CRRT versus IRRT for the National Institute of Social Services for Retirees and Pensioners, the largest social security health insurance for elders in Argentina., Methods: This was a model-based cost-utility analysis. Long-term costs and health outcomes were estimated for a hypothetical cohort with a Markov model. Parameters used were obtained from published literature and validated with local experts. Local costs were estimated and expressed in $AR of 2016. Several sensitivity analyses were run to analyze the impact of uncertainty on results., Results: Continuous RRT dominated IRRT by cumulating over the model more quality-adjusted life years and less costs. Total discounted quality-adjusted life years for both cohorts were 1049 and 1034, respectively, and total costs were $95 362 and $103 871. Cost-effectiveness (CE) results reflect these differences in favor of CRRT with a deterministic cost-saving incremental CE ratio and a probability of CRRT being CE of 65.4%, considering a CE threshold of 1 gross domestic product per capita., Conclusions: Continuous RRT for patients with AKI eligible for CRRT or IRRT would probably be a cost-effective intervention for the National Institute of Social Services for Retirees and Pensioners' view. Nevertheless, there is considerable uncertainty around results, mainly due to the lack of adequate controlled studies and local data on the prognosis of these patients in Argentina., (Copyright © 2019 ISPOR--The professional society for health economics and outcomes research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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192. Alcohol consumption's attributable disease burden and cost-effectiveness of targeted public health interventions: a systematic review of mathematical models.
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Bardach AE, Alcaraz AO, Ciapponi A, Garay OU, Riviere AP, Palacios A, Cremonte M, and Augustovski F
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Alcohol-Related Disorders epidemiology, Alcohol-Related Disorders prevention & control, Health Promotion economics
- Abstract
Background: Around 6% of total deaths are related to alcohol consumption worldwide. Mathematical models are important tools to estimate disease burden and to assess the cost-effectiveness of interventions to address this burden., Methods: We carried out a systematic review on models, searching main health literature databases up to July 2017. Pairs of reviewers independently selected, extracted data and assessed the quality of the included studies. Discrepancies were resolved by consensus. We selected those models exploring: a) disease burden (main metrics being attributable deaths, disability-adjusted life years, quality-adjusted life years) or b) economic evaluations of health interventions or policies, based on models including the aforementioned outcomes. We grouped models into broad families according to their common central methodological approach., Results: Out of 4295 reports identified, 63 met our inclusion criteria and were categorized in three main model families that were described in detail: 1) State transition -i.e Markov- models, 2) Life Table-based models and 3) Attributable fraction-based models. Most studies pertained to the latter one (n = 29, 48.3%). A few miscellaneous models could not be framed into these families., Conclusions: Our findings can be useful for future researchers and decision makers planning to undertake alcohol-related disease burden or cost-effectiveness studies. We found several different families of models. Countries interested in adopting relevant public health measures may choose or adapt the one deemed most convenient, based on the availability of existing data at the local level, burden of work, and public health and economic outcomes of interest.
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- 2019
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193. Burden of smoking in Brazil and potential benefit of increasing taxes on cigarettes for the economy and for reducing morbidity and mortality.
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Pinto M, Bardach A, Palacios A, Biz A, Alcaraz A, Rodriguez B, Augustovski F, and Pichon-Riviere A
- Subjects
- Brazil, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Commerce, Cost of Illness, Health Care Costs, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Morbidity, Prevalence, Smoking adverse effects, Smoking Prevention economics, Tobacco Industry economics, Tobacco Industry legislation & jurisprudence, Quality of Life, Smoking economics, Smoking Prevention methods, Taxes legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
The prevalence of smoking in Brazil has decreased considerably in recent decades, but the country still has a high burden of disease associated with this risk factor. The study aimed to estimate the burden of mortality, morbidity, and costs for society associated with smoking in 2015 and the potential impact on health outcomes and the economy based on price increases for cigarettes through taxes. Two models were developed: the first is a mathematical model based on a probabilistic microsimulation of thousands of individuals using hypothetical cohorts that considered the natural history, costs, and quality of life of these individuals. The second is a tax model applied to estimate the economic benefit and health outcomes in different price increase scenarios in 10 years. Smoking was responsible for 156,337 deaths, 4.2 million years of potential life lost, 229,071 acute myocardial infarctions, 59,509 strokes, and 77,500 cancer diagnoses. The total cost was BRL 56.9 billion (USD 14.7 billion), with 70% corresponding to the direct cost associated with healthcare and the rest to indirect cost due to lost productivity from premature death and disability. A 50% increase in cigarette prices would avoid 136,482 deaths, 507,451 cases of cardiovascular diseases, 64,382 cases of cancer, and 100,365 cases of stroke. The estimated economic benefit would be BRL 97.9 billion (USD 25.5 billion). In conclusion, the burden of disease and economic losses associated with smoking is high in Brazil, and tax increases are capable of averting deaths, illness, and costs to society.
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- 2019
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194. Cost-Effectiveness of a Comprehensive Approach for Hypertension Control in Low-Income Settings in Argentina: Trial-Based Analysis of the Hypertension Control Program in Argentina.
- Author
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Augustovski F, Chaparro M, Palacios A, Shi L, Beratarrechea A, Irazola V, Rubinstein A, Mills K, He J, and Pichon Riviere A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Argentina, Community Health Workers, Female, Health Care Costs, Health Promotion methods, Health Resources, Home Care Services economics, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Education as Topic methods, Physicians, Quality of Life, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Text Messaging, Blood Pressure, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Health Promotion economics, Hypertension therapy, Patient Education as Topic economics, Poverty, Primary Health Care economics
- Abstract
Background: A recent cluster randomized trial evaluating a multicomponent intervention showed significant reductions in blood pressure in low-income hypertensive subjects in Argentina., Objectives: To assess the cost-effectiveness of this intervention., Methods: A total of 1432 hypertensive participants were recruited from 18 primary health care centers. The intervention included home visits led by community health workers, physician education, and text messaging. Resource use and quality of life data using the three-level EuroQol five-dimensional questionnaire were prospectively collected. The study perspective was that of the public health care system, and the time horizon was 18 months. Intention-to-treat analysis was used to analyze cost and health outcomes (systolic blood pressure [SBP] change and quality-adjusted life-years [QALYs]). A 1 time gross domestic product per capita per QALY was used as the cost-effectiveness threshold (US $14,062)., Results: Baseline characteristics were similar in the two arms. QALYs significantly increased by 0.06 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.04-0.09) in the intervention group, and SBP net difference favored the intervention group: 5.3 mm Hg (95% CI 0.27-10.34). Mean total costs per participant were higher in the intervention arm: US $304 in the intervention group and US $154 in the control group (adjusted difference of US $140.18; 95% CI US $75.41-US $204.94). The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was $3299 per QALY (95% credible interval 1635-6099) and US $26 per mm Hg of SBP (95% credible interval 13-46). Subgroup analysis showed that the intervention was cost-effective in all prespecified subgroups (age, sex, cardiovascular risk, and body mass index)., Conclusions: The multicomponent intervention was cost-effective for blood pressure control among low-income hypertensive patients., (Copyright © 2018 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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195. [Burden of disease attributable to tobacco use in Paraguay, and potential health and financial impact of increasing prices through taxing].
- Author
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Bardach A, Cañete F, Sequera VG, Palacios A, Alcaraz A, Rodríguez B, Caporale J, Augustovski F, and Pichon-Riviere A
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Paraguay, Tobacco Use prevention & control, Commerce, Cost of Illness, Taxes, Tobacco Use adverse effects, Tobacco Use economics
- Abstract
Objectives: To consider the burden of disease associated to tobacco consumption in Paraguay and to evaluate the potential economic and health effect of price increase through taxes., Materials and Methods: A Monte Carlo simulation model was designed incorporating natural history, costs, and quality of life of diseases associated to smoking for 2015. Also, several scenarios were considered for the impact of tax raises on the prevalence of smoking and fiscal collection., Results: In Paraguay, 3,354 people die every year as a consequence of smoking. Nineteen percent of deaths are due to cardiac ischemia, 15% due to stroke. 77% of deaths due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and 83% of lung cancer can be attributed to smoking. These diseases in Paraguay represent an annual direct medical cost of more than 1.5 trillion PYG, while the tax collection from cigarette sales barely covers 20% of this expense. A 50% increase in the price of cigarettes via taxes could avoid 2507 deaths in ten years and generate resources by 2.4 trillion in savings in health expenses and tax of collection., Conclusions: The cost and the burden of disease associated to tobacco consumption is high in the health system in Paraguay. An increase in cigarette price through taxes could have significant health benefits and could offset health costs in part.
- Published
- 2018
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196. [Cost-effectiveness of screening for colorectal cancer in Argentina.]
- Author
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Espinola N, Maceira D, and Palacios A
- Subjects
- Aged, Argentina epidemiology, Colonic Neoplasms epidemiology, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Markov Chains, Middle Aged, Rectal Neoplasms epidemiology, Sensitivity and Specificity, Colonic Neoplasms diagnosis, Mass Screening economics, Rectal Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
International evidence show that screening for colorectal cancer is cost-effective; however, in Argentina is unknown., Objective: The study shows the results of a cost-effectiveness evaluation based on two alternative mechanisms: annual faecal immunochemical testing (FIT), and colonoscopy every ten years in Argentina., Methods: The study develops a Mar- kov model in ten stages, based on information provided by the INC, prior literature review and on-line questionnaires to physicians enrolled in the four major scientific societies related to cancer. Cost information arrived from the Na- tional Superintendence of Social Health Insurances and a sample of managers in social and private insurance schemes., Results: The most cost-effective strategy consisted annual FIT, in comparison no intervention and colonoscopy every 10 years. The incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER) of FIT versus no intervention was of 980.5 pesos per QALY The findings were robust to deterministic sensitivity analysis., Conclusions: We confirmed that screening for CRC is a cost-effective intervention. Whereas the CCR is one of the leading causes of mortality in Argentina, these results support the widespread use of screening for CRC using anual FIT which proves to be highly cost effective for the country.
- Published
- 2016
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