医学
成本效益分析
生产力
环境卫生
乙型肝炎
经济成本
经济影响分析
投资(军事)
疾病负担
人口学
经济增长
免疫学
人口
经济
新古典经济学
社会学
政治
政治学
法学
生物
微观经济学
生态学
作者
Chris Seaman,Phillip Luong,Yinzong Xiao,Romesh Abeysuriya,Jess Howell,Margaret Hellard,Nick Scott
标识
DOI:10.1016/s2468-1253(23)00156-5
摘要
Hepatitis B is estimated to cause 500 000-900 000 deaths globally each year. WHO has targets for elimination by 2030; however, progress has stalled due to multiple barriers, notably a paucity of global funding and insufficient evidence on the economic burden of disease. Using a dynamic mathematical model of hepatitis B transmission, disease progression, and mortality in the six WHO regions, we estimate the costs and benefits of reaching 90% vaccination, 90% diagnosis, and 80% treatment coverage by either 2030 (as targeted), 2040, or 2050. Without increased intervention coverage, hepatitis B mortality was estimated to cost US$784·35 billion (95% Crl 731·63-798·33 billion) globally in lost productivity over 2022-50. Achieving targets by 2030 averted 25·64 million infections (95% Crl 17·39-34·55 million) and 8·63 million hepatitis B-attributable deaths (95% Crl 7·12-9·74 million) over 2022-50. This achievement incurred an incremental cost of $2934·55 (95% Crl 2778·55-3173·52) per disability-adjusted life year averted by 2050 under a health systems perspective, and was cost-saving with a net economic benefit of $99·03 billion (95% Crl 78·66-108·96 billion) by 2050 from a societal perspective. Delayed achievement of intervention coverage targets had reduced health and economic benefits. These findings highlight that hepatitis B is an underappreciated cause of economic burden and show investment toward elimination will probably yield substantial returns.
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