The economic and health impact of substandard uterotonic use for prevention of postpartum hemorrhage in three Sub-Saharan African countries: a comparative analysis.

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Petra Procter, Sara Rushwan, Yi-Fang Ashley Lee, Colleen R Higgins, A Metin Gülmezoglu, Lester Chinery, Sachiko Ozawa
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Abstract

Background: Uterotonics are essential in reducing the risk of postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) and saving mothers' lives. However, numerous quality-testing studies have found that uterotonics in many low- and middle-income countries are substandard. This study compares the economic, health, and policy implications of poor-quality uterotonics in three West African countries: Ghana, Nigeria, and Senegal. The economic impact of poor-quality uterotonics has not been previously compared.

Methods: We utilized a decision-tree model to examine the implications of using substandard uterotonics (oxytocin and misoprostol) in three countries. The model simulated the place and mode of delivery, use and quality of uterotonics, risk and diagnosis of PPH and resulting economic and health outcomes. Country-specific inputs were derived from demographic and health surveys and published literature. Given large variations in population size, results were compared across 100 000 women giving birth.

Results: Ghana demonstrated the greatest benefit from improvements in uterotonic quality, with US $2 million (13%) in annual cost savings and 2200 (11%) cases of PPH avoided per 100 000 women giving birth. Comparatively, annual cost savings were estimated at US $1.1 million (7%) and US $224,000 (7%) per 100 000 birthing women in Nigeria and Senegal, respectively. The yearly reduction in PPH cases per 100 000 birthing women was projected at 875 (6%) for Senegal and 944 (4%) for Nigeria. Taking varying population sizes into account, we saw that improvement in uterotonic quality could annually save US $89 million in Nigeria, US $18.8 million in Ghana and US $1.3 million in Senegal, leading to 100 000 fewer PPH cases per year overall. These simulated results were primarily driven by high proportions of substandard uterotonics and high facility use in Ghana, high numbers of home births in Nigeria and substandard misoprostol use in Senegal.

Conclusions: Improving uterotonic quality would bring significant cost savings and maternal health improvements across countries. Specific policies to improve uterotonic quality and bring about the economic and health benefits may need to be tailored by country. Ensuring the quality of uterotonics is essential in improving medicine equity and would contribute towards efforts to achieve universal health coverage by ensuring that medications adequately achieve their value for money.

三个撒哈拉以南非洲国家使用不合格子宫紧张剂预防产后出血的经济和健康影响:比较分析。
背景:子宫强张对于降低产后出血(PPH)的风险和挽救母亲的生命至关重要。然而,许多质量测试研究发现,许多低收入和中等收入国家的子宫强直是不合格的。本研究比较了三个西非国家(加纳、尼日利亚和塞内加尔)低质量催宫剂对经济、健康和政策的影响。以前没有比较过劣质子宫滋补对经济的影响。方法:我们使用决策树模型来检查三个国家使用不合格的子宫强直剂(催产素和米索前列醇)的影响。该模型模拟了分娩地点和方式、子宫强张术的使用和质量、PPH的风险和诊断以及由此产生的经济和健康结果。针对具体国家的投入来自人口和健康调查以及已发表的文献。考虑到人口规模的巨大差异,研究人员对10万名分娩妇女的结果进行了比较。结果:加纳从子宫扩张质量的改善中获益最大,每年节省成本200万美元(13%),每10万名分娩妇女避免了2200例PPH(11%)。相比之下,据估计,尼日利亚和塞内加尔每10万名分娩妇女每年可分别节省110万美元(7%)和22.4万美元(7%)。预计塞内加尔每10万名分娩妇女中PPH病例每年减少875例(6%),尼日利亚减少944例(4%)。考虑到不同的人口规模,我们发现改善子宫张力质量每年可在尼日利亚节省8900万美元,在加纳节省1880万美元,在塞内加尔节省130万美元,从而使PPH病例总数每年减少10万例。这些模拟结果主要是由加纳不合格的子宫强化剂比例高、设备使用率高、尼日利亚在家分娩人数多以及塞内加尔使用不合格的米索前列醇造成的。结论:改善子宫张力质量将显著节省成本并改善各国的孕产妇健康状况。改善子宫张力质量并带来经济和健康效益的具体政策可能需要根据国家的情况而定。确保子宫紧张剂的质量对于改善医疗公平至关重要,并将有助于通过确保药品充分实现物有所值来实现全民健康覆盖的努力。
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
Health Research Policy and Systems
Health Research Policy and Systems HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
7.50%
发文量
124
审稿时长
27 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Research Policy and Systems is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal that aims to provide a platform for the global research community to share their views, findings, insights and successes. Health Research Policy and Systems considers manuscripts that investigate the role of evidence-based health policy and health research systems in ensuring the efficient utilization and application of knowledge to improve health and health equity, especially in developing countries. Research is the foundation for improvements in public health. The problem is that people involved in different areas of research, together with managers and administrators in charge of research entities, do not communicate sufficiently with each other.
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