产前和幼儿营养干预的最佳分配:基于个体的全球疾病负担校准微观模拟。

Alison Bowman, Sylvia Lutze, James Albright, Nathaniel Blair-Stahn, Hussain Jafari, Simar Kaur, Caroline Kinuthia, Rajan Mudambi, Patrick Nast, Alix Pletcher, Abraham Flaxman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:营养不良仍然是一场全球危机,也是可持续发展目标的一个重点。虽然有多种已知的有效干预措施,但预防和治疗之间复杂的相互作用以及资源限制可能导致资金分配困难。使用计算机模拟的模拟研究可以帮助阐明干预措施之间的相互作用,并提供对替代选项包的成本效益的见解。方法:我们基于全球疾病负担(GBD) 2021研究数据开发了一个基于个体的微观模拟模型,以测试一系列营养干预措施,包括产前干预(铁和叶酸,多种微量营养素和平衡能量蛋白质补充)和儿童干预(治疗严重急性营养不良,治疗中度急性营养不良,以及使用少量基于脂质的营养补充剂预防消耗)。我们还开发了一种分析方法来处理微观模拟的结果,并确定在给定预算规模下的最佳干预资金分配。本文以埃塞俄比亚为例。结果:以埃塞俄比亚为例,为了最大限度地减少残疾调整生命年(DALYs)而重新分配基线预算,首先为产前多种微量营养素提供最大覆盖范围的资金,然后为严重儿童急性营养不良的治疗提供资金。与基线分配相比,优化了最大限度地减少DALYs的重新分配导致每年的DALYs减少了59.2万,使埃塞俄比亚的DALYs总量减少了8.3%。对于高于基线的预算,我们的模型建议首先针对中度急性营养不良治疗,其次是普遍的中度急性营养不良治疗,第三是通过少量脂质营养补充剂预防消瘦,第四是平衡能量蛋白质补充。结论:我们的模拟是一个新的模型,用于估计产前和儿童健康营养干预支出的最佳分配,这说明了预防和治疗方法之间的相互作用。我们的说明性结果表明,优化当前支出的再分配可以在不增加资金的情况下大大改善与怀孕有关的健康和儿童健康。我们希望这一模型能够为先前的结果增加有效性和信心,以帮助利益相关者做出资金决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Optimal allocation of antenatal and young child nutrition interventions: an individual-based global burden of disease calibrated microsimulation.

Background: Undernutrition remains a global crisis and is a focus of Sustainable Development Goals. While there are multiple known, effective interventions, complex interactions between prevention and treatment and resource constraints can lead to difficulties in allocating funding. Simulation studies that use in silico simulation can help illuminate the interactions between interventions and provide insight into the cost-effectiveness of alternative packages of options.

Methods: We developed an individual-based microsimulation model based on the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2021 study data to test a range of nutrition interventions, including antenatal interventions (iron and folic acid, multiple micronutrients, and balanced energy protein supplementation) and child interventions (treatment for severe acute malnutrition, treatment for moderate acute malnutrition, and wasting prevention with small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements). We also developed an analytic approach to process the results of the microsimulation and identify the optimal intervention funding allocation for a given budget size. We use Ethiopia as an example in this paper.

Results: In our illustrative example of Ethiopia, the reallocation of the baseline budget to minimize disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) resulted in first funding the antenatal multiple micronutrients to their maximum coverage and then funding treatment for severe child acute malnutrition. Relative to the baseline allocation, the reallocation optimized to minimizing DALYs resulted in 592,000 fewer annual DALYs, constituting an 8.3% reduction in total DALYs in Ethiopia. For budgets larger than the baseline, our model recommended funding first targeted moderate acute malnutrition treatment, second universal moderate acute malnutrition treatment, third wasting prevention with small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements, and fourth balanced energy protein supplementation.

Conclusions: Our simulation is a novel model for estimating optimal allocation of spending on antenatal and child health nutrition interventions which accounts for the interaction between preventive and therapeutic approaches. Our illustrative results show that an optimized reallocation of current spending can substantially improve pregnancy-related and child health without additional funding. We hope this model can add validity and confidence to prior results to aid stakeholders in funding decisions.

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