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Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda

INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is a leading cause of under-5 mortality, with the greatest burden in lower-resource settings. Strategies to improve preterm survival have been tested, but strategy costs are less understood. We estimate costs of a highly effective Preterm Birth Initiative (PTBi) intrapart...

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Autores principales: Smith Hughes, Carolyn, Butrick, Elizabeth, Namutundu, Juliana, Olwanda, Easter, Otieno, Phelgona, Waiswa, Peter, Walker, Dilys, Kahn, James G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10289453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37352149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0287309
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author Smith Hughes, Carolyn
Butrick, Elizabeth
Namutundu, Juliana
Olwanda, Easter
Otieno, Phelgona
Waiswa, Peter
Walker, Dilys
Kahn, James G.
author_facet Smith Hughes, Carolyn
Butrick, Elizabeth
Namutundu, Juliana
Olwanda, Easter
Otieno, Phelgona
Waiswa, Peter
Walker, Dilys
Kahn, James G.
author_sort Smith Hughes, Carolyn
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is a leading cause of under-5 mortality, with the greatest burden in lower-resource settings. Strategies to improve preterm survival have been tested, but strategy costs are less understood. We estimate costs of a highly effective Preterm Birth Initiative (PTBi) intrapartum intervention package (data strengthening, WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist, simulation and team training, quality improvement collaboratives) and active control (data strengthening, Safe Childbirth Checklist). METHODS: In our analysis, we estimated costs incremental to current cost of intrapartum care (in 2020 $US) for the PTBi intervention package and active control in Kenya and Uganda. We costed the intervention package and control in two scenarios: 1) non-research implementation costs as observed in the PTBi study (Scenario 1, mix of public and private inputs), and 2) hypothetical costs for a model of implementation into Ministry of Health programming (Scenario 2, mostly public inputs). Using a healthcare system perspective, we employed micro-costing of personnel, supplies, physical space, and travel, including 3 sequential phases: program planning/adaptation (9 months); high-intensity implementation (15 months); lower-intensity maintenance (annual). One-way sensitivity analyses explored the effects of uncertainty in Scenario 2. RESULTS: Scenario 1 PTBi package total costs were $1.11M in Kenya ($48.13/birth) and $0.74M in Uganda ($17.19/birtth). Scenario 2 total costs were $0.86M in Kenya ($23.91/birth) and $0.28M in Uganda ($5.47/birth); annual maintenance phase costs per birth were $16.36 in Kenya and $3.47 in Uganda. In each scenario and country, personnel made up at least 72% of total PTBi package costs. Total Scenario 2 costs in Uganda were consistently one-third those of Kenya, largely driven by differences in facility delivery volume and personnel salaries. CONCLUSIONS: If taken up and implemented, the PTBi package has the potential to save preterm lives, with potential steady-state (maintenance) costs that would be roughly 5–15% of total per-birth healthcare costs in Uganda and Kenya.
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spelling pubmed-102894532023-06-24 Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda Smith Hughes, Carolyn Butrick, Elizabeth Namutundu, Juliana Olwanda, Easter Otieno, Phelgona Waiswa, Peter Walker, Dilys Kahn, James G. PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is a leading cause of under-5 mortality, with the greatest burden in lower-resource settings. Strategies to improve preterm survival have been tested, but strategy costs are less understood. We estimate costs of a highly effective Preterm Birth Initiative (PTBi) intrapartum intervention package (data strengthening, WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist, simulation and team training, quality improvement collaboratives) and active control (data strengthening, Safe Childbirth Checklist). METHODS: In our analysis, we estimated costs incremental to current cost of intrapartum care (in 2020 $US) for the PTBi intervention package and active control in Kenya and Uganda. We costed the intervention package and control in two scenarios: 1) non-research implementation costs as observed in the PTBi study (Scenario 1, mix of public and private inputs), and 2) hypothetical costs for a model of implementation into Ministry of Health programming (Scenario 2, mostly public inputs). Using a healthcare system perspective, we employed micro-costing of personnel, supplies, physical space, and travel, including 3 sequential phases: program planning/adaptation (9 months); high-intensity implementation (15 months); lower-intensity maintenance (annual). One-way sensitivity analyses explored the effects of uncertainty in Scenario 2. RESULTS: Scenario 1 PTBi package total costs were $1.11M in Kenya ($48.13/birth) and $0.74M in Uganda ($17.19/birtth). Scenario 2 total costs were $0.86M in Kenya ($23.91/birth) and $0.28M in Uganda ($5.47/birth); annual maintenance phase costs per birth were $16.36 in Kenya and $3.47 in Uganda. In each scenario and country, personnel made up at least 72% of total PTBi package costs. Total Scenario 2 costs in Uganda were consistently one-third those of Kenya, largely driven by differences in facility delivery volume and personnel salaries. CONCLUSIONS: If taken up and implemented, the PTBi package has the potential to save preterm lives, with potential steady-state (maintenance) costs that would be roughly 5–15% of total per-birth healthcare costs in Uganda and Kenya. Public Library of Science 2023-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10289453/ /pubmed/37352149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0287309 Text en © 2023 Hughes et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith Hughes, Carolyn
Butrick, Elizabeth
Namutundu, Juliana
Olwanda, Easter
Otieno, Phelgona
Waiswa, Peter
Walker, Dilys
Kahn, James G.
Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda
title Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda
title_full Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda
title_fullStr Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda
title_short Cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in Kenya and Uganda
title_sort cost analysis of an intrapartum quality improvement package for improving preterm survival and reinforcing best practices in kenya and uganda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10289453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37352149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0287309
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