Universal vaccination of children against hepatitis A in Chile: a cost-effectiveness study

DSpace/Manakin Repository

Universal vaccination of children against hepatitis A in Chile: a cost-effectiveness study

xmlui.ArtifactBrowser.ItemViewer.citar_tesis
Cómo citar

Universal vaccination of children against hepatitis A in Chile: a cost-effectiveness study

.
Copiar
Title: Universal vaccination of children against hepatitis A in Chile: a cost-effectiveness study
Author: Quezada, Arnoldo; Baron-Papillon, Florence; Coudeville, Laurent; Maggi, Leonardo
Abstract: Objective. To evaluate the healthcare and economic impact of routine hepatitis A vaccination of toddlers in Chile. Methods. We used a dynamic model of hepatitis A infection to evaluate the impact of a twodose vaccination program, administered at ages 12 and 18 months. The model incorporated the changing epidemiology of hepatitis A in Chile and the development of vaccine-induced herd immunity. Our analysis was conducted from the public payer perspective, and an estimation of the societal perspective was performed. Costs are expressed in 2005 U.S. dollars. Results. Vaccination of toddlers rapidly reduced the healthcare burden of hepatitis A. In the base case (95% vaccination coverage, 100-year time horizon, 1% annual decrease in force of infection), the average number of infections fell by 76.6% annually, and associated deaths fell by 59.7%. Even at 50% coverage, the program reduced infection rates substantially. Routine vaccination of toddlers had economic as well as health benefits, saving $4 984 per life-year gained (base case scenario). The program became cost saving after 6 years, and its overall costeffectiveness per life-year gained was largely unaffected by changes in disease-related costs, herd immunity, coverage rate, and annual decrease in force of infection. Conclusions. Routine vaccination of toddlers will reduce the rates of symptomatic hepatitis A and associated mortality. The two-dose schedule evaluated here will be less expensive than disease-related costs in the absence of vaccination from the sixth year of its implementation. These findings support the establishment of a routine vaccination program for toddlers in Chile.
URI: http://www.captura.uchile.cl/handle/2250/6854
Date: 2008-05
dc.identifier.citation: REVISTA PANAMERICANA DE SALUD PUBLICA-PAN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, Volume: 23, Issue: 5, Pages: 303-312, 2008


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Quezada_Arnoldo.pdf 502.0Kb PDF View/Open

The following license files are associated with this item:

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Compartir:
cargando...
Copiar