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Potential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria in low-income and middle-income countries: a modelling study

Authors :
Marc Baguelin
Tara D. Mangal
Thomas A. Mellan
Neil M. Ferguson
Katy A. M. Gaythorpe
Laura V Cooper
Azra C. Ghani
Bimandra A Djaafara
Britta L Jewell
Lilith K Whittles
Kris V Parag
Ellie Sherrard-Smith
Jeff Eaton
D Haw
Oliver J Watson
Michaela A. C. Vollmer
John A. Lees
Thomas S. Churcher
Nicholas F Brazeau
Xiaoyue Xi
Jennifer A. Smith
William Green
Wes Hinsley
Amy Dighe
H. Juliette T. Unwin
Christl A. Donnelly
Gemma Nedjati-Gilani
Samir Bhatt
Kylie E. C. Ainslie
Caroline E. Walters
A Boonyasiri
Sarah Hayes
Hayley A Thompson
Richard G. FitzJohn
Swapnil Mishra
Sabine L. van Elsland
Juan F. Vesga
Daniel J Laydon
Peter Winskill
Charles Whittaker
Lucy C Okell
Timothy B. Hallett
Alexandra B. Hogan
Y Wang
Natsuko Imai
Patrick G T Walker
Gina Cuomo-Dannenburg
Arran Hamlet
Haowei Wang
Nimalan Arinaminpathy
Helen Coupland
Robert Verity
Lorenzo Cattarino
Han Fu
Source :
The Lancet Global Health, Vol 8, Iss 9, Pp e1132-e1141 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Summary Background COVID-19 has the potential to cause substantial disruptions to health services, due to cases overburdening the health system or response measures limiting usual programmatic activities. We aimed to quantify the extent to which disruptions to services for HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria in low-income and middle-income countries with high burdens of these diseases could lead to additional loss of life over the next 5 years. Methods Assuming a basic reproduction number of 3·0, we constructed four scenarios for possible responses to the COVID-19 pandemic: no action, mitigation for 6 months, suppression for 2 months, or suppression for 1 year. We used established transmission models of HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria to estimate the additional impact on health that could be caused in selected settings, either due to COVID-19 interventions limiting activities, or due to the high demand on the health system due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Findings In high-burden settings, deaths due to HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria over 5 years could increase by up to 10%, 20%, and 36%, respectively, compared with if there was no COVID-19 pandemic. The greatest impact on HIV was estimated to be from interruption to antiretroviral therapy, which could occur during a period of high health system demand. For tuberculosis, the greatest impact would be from reductions in timely diagnosis and treatment of new cases, which could result from any prolonged period of COVID-19 suppression interventions. The greatest impact on malaria burden could be as a result of interruption of planned net campaigns. These disruptions could lead to a loss of life-years over 5 years that is of the same order of magnitude as the direct impact from COVID-19 in places with a high burden of malaria and large HIV and tuberculosis epidemics. Interpretation Maintaining the most critical prevention activities and health-care services for HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria could substantially reduce the overall impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, UK Department for International Development, and Medical Research Council.

Details

ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b691d9f98984c50e2d83e21e7d57d55e