Examining malaria treatment and prevention spending efficiency in malaria-endemic countries, 2000-2020.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Angela E Apeagyei, Ian Cogswell, Nishali K Patel, Kevin O'Rourke, Golsum Tsakalos, Joseph L Dieleman
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Abstract

Background: In 2021, an estimated 750,000 people died from malaria. Despite this significant burden, globally, malaria incidence and mortality rates have substantially dropped over the last 30 years. However, growth in spending on malaria and improved outcomes have recently stagnated. This development has made it more important than ever to understand what constitutes efficient spending on malaria.

Methods: Data from various sources, including disaggregated data on malaria spending from the WHO Global Malaria Programme, National Health Accounts, and the Global Burden of Disease 2021 study was used in this study. The National Health Account report is produced at the end of a national accounting exercise that aims to map the flow of financial resources from all perspectives-incl. sources, agencies-in the health sector. Malaria spending estimates for all malaria-endemic countries from 2000 to 2020, with government and donor spending disaggregated into 11 key programme areas were generated in this study. Then, these spending estimates were combined with outcome data and estimated country efficiency using robust non-parametric stochastic frontier analysis and linear regression to examine the types of malaria spending associated with better malaria outcomes.

Results: Across malaria-endemic countries, there is wide variation in malaria spending, with spending associated with the malaria burden within the country. Argentina, Paraguay, and Turkmenistan stood out as examples of low spending relative to their respective malaria incident per person at risk rates, while the Philippines, Guatemala, and Sri Lanka stood out as countries with case fatality ratios that were low relative to their malaria spending. Having a greater proportion of malaria spending sourced from donors or on prevention was associated with increases in incidence efficiency, while having a greater proportion of spending on anti-malarial medicines was associated with increases in case fatality efficiency.

Conclusions: Prioritization of spending on prevention, anti-malarial medicines, and health systems strengthening can fight incident cases and fatalities simultaneously, especially in resource-scarce, malaria-endemic countries. Furthermore, improving the availability, frequency of collection, and quality of detailed disaggregated spending data is essential to support work that strengthens the evidence base on spending efficiency and work that improves understanding of how spending on malaria could be leveraged to bridge gaps in equity across population groups.

2000-2020 年疟疾流行国家疟疾治疗和预防支出效率研究。
背景:2021 年,估计有 75 万人死于疟疾。尽管疟疾造成了沉重的负担,但在过去 30 年中,全球疟疾发病率和死亡率已大幅下降。然而,疟疾防治支出的增长和成果的改善最近却停滞不前。因此,现在比以往任何时候都更有必要了解什么是有效的疟疾防治支出:本研究使用了各种来源的数据,包括世界卫生组织全球疟疾计划、国民健康账户和 2021 年全球疾病负担研究中有关疟疾支出的分类数据。国民健康账户报告是在国民核算工作结束时编制的,旨在从各个角度--包括来源、机构--绘制卫生部门的财政资源流动图。本研究对所有疟疾流行国家 2000 年至 2020 年的疟疾支出进行了估算,并将政府和捐助方的支出细分为 11 个主要计划领域。然后,将这些支出估算与成果数据相结合,并使用稳健的非参数随机前沿分析和线性回归估算国家效率,以研究与更好的疟疾成果相关的疟疾支出类型:结果:在疟疾流行的国家中,疟疾支出差异很大,支出与国内的疟疾负担有关。阿根廷、巴拉圭和土库曼斯坦的疟疾支出相对于其人均疟疾发病率较低,而菲律宾、危地马拉和斯里兰卡的病死率相对于其疟疾支出较低。疟疾防治支出中来自捐助方或用于预防的支出比例越高,发病率的效率就越高,而用于抗疟药物的支出比例越高,病死率的效率就越高:结论:优先考虑用于预防、抗疟药物和加强卫生系统的支出可以同时降低发病率和死亡率,尤其是在资源匮乏、疟疾流行的国家。此外,提高详细分类支出数据的可用性、收集频率和质量,对于支持加强支出效率证据基础的工作,以及更好地了解如何利用疟疾防治支出缩小不同人群之间的公平差距至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Malaria Journal
Malaria Journal 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
23.30%
发文量
334
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Malaria Journal is aimed at the scientific community interested in malaria in its broadest sense. It is the only journal that publishes exclusively articles on malaria and, as such, it aims to bring together knowledge from the different specialities involved in this very broad discipline, from the bench to the bedside and to the field.
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