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Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan

Japan is one of the few rabies-free countries/territories which implement the policy of mandatory vaccination of domestic dogs. In order to assess the economic efficiency of such policy in reducing the economic burden of a future canine rabies outbreak in Japan, a benefit-cost analysis (BCA) was per...

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Autores principales: Kwan, Nigel C. L., Yamada, Akio, Sugiura, Katsuaki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6296744/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30557398
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206717
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author Kwan, Nigel C. L.
Yamada, Akio
Sugiura, Katsuaki
author_facet Kwan, Nigel C. L.
Yamada, Akio
Sugiura, Katsuaki
author_sort Kwan, Nigel C. L.
collection PubMed
description Japan is one of the few rabies-free countries/territories which implement the policy of mandatory vaccination of domestic dogs. In order to assess the economic efficiency of such policy in reducing the economic burden of a future canine rabies outbreak in Japan, a benefit-cost analysis (BCA) was performed using probabilistic decision tree modelling. Input data derived from simulation results of published mathematical model, field investigation conducted by the authors at prefectural governments, literature review, international or Japanese database and empirical data of rabies outbreaks in other countries/territories. The current study revealed that the annual costs of implementing the current vaccination policy would be US$160,472,075 (90% prediction interval [PI]: $149,268,935–171,669,974). The economic burden of a potential single canine rabies outbreak in Japan were estimated to be US$1,682,707 (90% PI: $1,180,289–2,249,283) under the current vaccination policy, while it would be US$5,019,093 (90% PI: $3,986,882–6,133,687) under hypothetical abolition of vaccination policy, which is 3-fold higher. Under a damage-avoided approach, the annual benefits of implementing the current vaccination policy in expected value were estimated to be US$85.75 (90% PI: $55.73–116.89). The benefit-cost ratio (BCR) was estimated to be 5.35 X 10(−7) (90% PI: 3.46 X 10(−7)–7.37 X 10(−7)), indicating that the implementation of the current policy is very economically inefficient for the purpose of reducing the economic burden of a potential canine rabies outbreak. In worse-case scenario analysis, the BCR would become above 1 (indicating economic efficiency) if the risk of rabies introduction increased to 0.04 corresponding to a level of risk where rabies would enter Japan in 26 years while the economic burden of a rabies outbreak under the abolition of vaccination policy increased to $7.53 billion. Best-case analysis further revealed that under relatively extreme circumstances the economic efficiency of the current policy could be improved by decreasing the vaccination price charged to dog owners, relaxing the frequency of vaccination to every two to three years and implementing the policy on a smaller scale, e.g. only in targeted prefectures instead of the whole Japan.
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spelling pubmed-62967442018-12-28 Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan Kwan, Nigel C. L. Yamada, Akio Sugiura, Katsuaki PLoS One Research Article Japan is one of the few rabies-free countries/territories which implement the policy of mandatory vaccination of domestic dogs. In order to assess the economic efficiency of such policy in reducing the economic burden of a future canine rabies outbreak in Japan, a benefit-cost analysis (BCA) was performed using probabilistic decision tree modelling. Input data derived from simulation results of published mathematical model, field investigation conducted by the authors at prefectural governments, literature review, international or Japanese database and empirical data of rabies outbreaks in other countries/territories. The current study revealed that the annual costs of implementing the current vaccination policy would be US$160,472,075 (90% prediction interval [PI]: $149,268,935–171,669,974). The economic burden of a potential single canine rabies outbreak in Japan were estimated to be US$1,682,707 (90% PI: $1,180,289–2,249,283) under the current vaccination policy, while it would be US$5,019,093 (90% PI: $3,986,882–6,133,687) under hypothetical abolition of vaccination policy, which is 3-fold higher. Under a damage-avoided approach, the annual benefits of implementing the current vaccination policy in expected value were estimated to be US$85.75 (90% PI: $55.73–116.89). The benefit-cost ratio (BCR) was estimated to be 5.35 X 10(−7) (90% PI: 3.46 X 10(−7)–7.37 X 10(−7)), indicating that the implementation of the current policy is very economically inefficient for the purpose of reducing the economic burden of a potential canine rabies outbreak. In worse-case scenario analysis, the BCR would become above 1 (indicating economic efficiency) if the risk of rabies introduction increased to 0.04 corresponding to a level of risk where rabies would enter Japan in 26 years while the economic burden of a rabies outbreak under the abolition of vaccination policy increased to $7.53 billion. Best-case analysis further revealed that under relatively extreme circumstances the economic efficiency of the current policy could be improved by decreasing the vaccination price charged to dog owners, relaxing the frequency of vaccination to every two to three years and implementing the policy on a smaller scale, e.g. only in targeted prefectures instead of the whole Japan. Public Library of Science 2018-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6296744/ /pubmed/30557398 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206717 Text en © 2018 Kwan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://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
Kwan, Nigel C. L.
Yamada, Akio
Sugiura, Katsuaki
Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan
title Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan
title_full Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan
title_fullStr Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan
title_full_unstemmed Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan
title_short Benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free Japan
title_sort benefit-cost analysis of the policy of mandatory annual rabies vaccination of domestic dogs in rabies-free japan
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6296744/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30557398
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206717
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