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Improved calibration estimators for the total cost of health programs and application to immunization in Brazil
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 3, p e0212401 (2019)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Multi-stage/level sampling designs have been widely used by survey statisticians as a means of obtaining reliable and efficient estimates at a reasonable implementation cost. This method has been particularly useful in National country-wide surveys to assess the costs of delivering public health programs, which are generally originated in different levels of service management and delivery. Unbiased and efficient estimates of costs are essential to adequately allocate resources and inform policy and planning. In recent years, the global health community has become increasingly interested in estimating the costs of immunization programs. In such programs, part of the cost correspond to vaccines and it is in most countries procured at the central level, while the rest of the costs are incurred in states, municipalities and health facilities, respectively. As such, total program cost is a result of adding these costs, and its variance should account for the relation between the totals at the different levels. An additional challenge is the missing information at the various levels. A variety of methods have been developed to compensate for this missing data. Weighting adjustments are often used to make the estimates consistent with readily-available information. For estimation of total program costs this implies adjusting the estimates at each level to comply with the characteristics of the country. In 2014, A National study to estimate the costs of the Brazilian National Immunization Program was initiated, requested by the Ministry of Health and with the support of international partners. We formulate a quick and useful way to compute the variance and deal with missing values at the various levels. Our approach involves calibrating the weights at each level using additional readily-available information such as the total number of doses administered. Taking the Brazilian immunization costing study as an example, this approach results in substantial gains in both efficiency and precision of the cost estimate.
- Subjects :
- Infectious Disease Control
Economics
Science
Immunology
Social Sciences
Research and Analysis Methods
Global Health
Geographical locations
Medicine and Health Sciences
Public and Occupational Health
Instrument Calibration
Health Systems Strengthening
Instrumentation
health care economics and organizations
Vaccines
Health Care Policy
Biology and Life Sciences
South America
Vaccination and Immunization
Health Care
Infectious Diseases
Medicine
Engineering and Technology
Preventive Medicine
People and places
Brazil
Finance
Research Article
Equipment Preparation
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 14
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid.dedup....032f6131c3c03a591e33c8d11b63857f