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Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria

INTRODUCTION: Improving hospital oxygen systems can improve quality of care and reduce mortality for children, but we lack data on cost-effectiveness or sustainability. This study evaluated medium-term sustainability and cost-effectiveness of the Nigeria Oxygen Implementation programme. METHODS: Pro...

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Autores principales: Graham, Hamish R, Bakare, Ayobami A, Ayede, Adejumoke Idowu, Eleyinmi, Joseph, Olatunde, Oyaniyi, Bakare, Oluwabunmi R, Edunwale, Blessing, Neal, Eleanor F G, Qazi, Shamim, McPake, Barbara, Peel, David, Gray, Amy Z, Duke, Trevor, Falade, Adegoke G
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9379491/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35948344
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009278
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author Graham, Hamish R
Bakare, Ayobami A
Ayede, Adejumoke Idowu
Eleyinmi, Joseph
Olatunde, Oyaniyi
Bakare, Oluwabunmi R
Edunwale, Blessing
Neal, Eleanor F G
Qazi, Shamim
McPake, Barbara
Peel, David
Gray, Amy Z
Duke, Trevor
Falade, Adegoke G
author_facet Graham, Hamish R
Bakare, Ayobami A
Ayede, Adejumoke Idowu
Eleyinmi, Joseph
Olatunde, Oyaniyi
Bakare, Oluwabunmi R
Edunwale, Blessing
Neal, Eleanor F G
Qazi, Shamim
McPake, Barbara
Peel, David
Gray, Amy Z
Duke, Trevor
Falade, Adegoke G
author_sort Graham, Hamish R
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Improving hospital oxygen systems can improve quality of care and reduce mortality for children, but we lack data on cost-effectiveness or sustainability. This study evaluated medium-term sustainability and cost-effectiveness of the Nigeria Oxygen Implementation programme. METHODS: Prospective follow-up of a stepped-wedge trial involving 12 secondary-level hospitals. Cross-sectional facility assessment, clinical audit (January–March 2021), summary admission data (January 2018–December 2020), programme cost data. Intervention: pulse oximetry introduction followed by solar-powered oxygen system installation with clinical and technical training and support. Primary outcomes: (i) proportion of children screened with pulse oximetry; (ii) proportion of hypoxaemic (SpO(2) <90%) children who received oxygen. Comparison across three time periods: preintervention (2014–2015), intervention (2016–2017) and follow-up (2018–2020) using mixed-effects logistic regression. Calculated cost-effectiveness of the intervention on child pneumonia mortality using programme costs, recorded deaths and estimated counterfactual deaths using effectiveness estimates from our effectiveness study. Reported cost-effectiveness over the original 2-year intervention period (2016–2017) and extrapolated over 5 years (2016–2020). RESULTS: Pulse oximetry coverage for neonates and children remained high during follow-up (83% and 81%) compared with full oxygen system period (94% and 92%) and preintervention (3.9% and 2.9%). Oxygen coverage for hypoxaemic neonates/children was similarly high (94%/88%) compared with full oxygen system period (90%/82%). Functional oxygen sources were present in 11/12 (92%) paediatric areas and all (8/8) neonatal areas; three-quarters (15/20) of wards had a functional oximeter. Of 32 concentrators deployed, 23/32 (72%) passed technical testing and usage was high (median 10 797 hours). Estimated 5-year cost-effectiveness US$86 per patient treated, $2694–4382 per life saved and $82–125 per disability-adjusted life year-averted. We identified practical issues for hospitals and Ministries of Health wishing to adapt and scale up pulse oximetry and oxygen. CONCLUSION: Hospital-level improvements to oxygen and pulse oximetry systems in Nigerian hospitals have been sustained over the medium-term and are a highly cost-effective child pneumonia intervention.
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spelling pubmed-93794912022-08-30 Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria Graham, Hamish R Bakare, Ayobami A Ayede, Adejumoke Idowu Eleyinmi, Joseph Olatunde, Oyaniyi Bakare, Oluwabunmi R Edunwale, Blessing Neal, Eleanor F G Qazi, Shamim McPake, Barbara Peel, David Gray, Amy Z Duke, Trevor Falade, Adegoke G BMJ Glob Health Original Research INTRODUCTION: Improving hospital oxygen systems can improve quality of care and reduce mortality for children, but we lack data on cost-effectiveness or sustainability. This study evaluated medium-term sustainability and cost-effectiveness of the Nigeria Oxygen Implementation programme. METHODS: Prospective follow-up of a stepped-wedge trial involving 12 secondary-level hospitals. Cross-sectional facility assessment, clinical audit (January–March 2021), summary admission data (January 2018–December 2020), programme cost data. Intervention: pulse oximetry introduction followed by solar-powered oxygen system installation with clinical and technical training and support. Primary outcomes: (i) proportion of children screened with pulse oximetry; (ii) proportion of hypoxaemic (SpO(2) <90%) children who received oxygen. Comparison across three time periods: preintervention (2014–2015), intervention (2016–2017) and follow-up (2018–2020) using mixed-effects logistic regression. Calculated cost-effectiveness of the intervention on child pneumonia mortality using programme costs, recorded deaths and estimated counterfactual deaths using effectiveness estimates from our effectiveness study. Reported cost-effectiveness over the original 2-year intervention period (2016–2017) and extrapolated over 5 years (2016–2020). RESULTS: Pulse oximetry coverage for neonates and children remained high during follow-up (83% and 81%) compared with full oxygen system period (94% and 92%) and preintervention (3.9% and 2.9%). Oxygen coverage for hypoxaemic neonates/children was similarly high (94%/88%) compared with full oxygen system period (90%/82%). Functional oxygen sources were present in 11/12 (92%) paediatric areas and all (8/8) neonatal areas; three-quarters (15/20) of wards had a functional oximeter. Of 32 concentrators deployed, 23/32 (72%) passed technical testing and usage was high (median 10 797 hours). Estimated 5-year cost-effectiveness US$86 per patient treated, $2694–4382 per life saved and $82–125 per disability-adjusted life year-averted. We identified practical issues for hospitals and Ministries of Health wishing to adapt and scale up pulse oximetry and oxygen. CONCLUSION: Hospital-level improvements to oxygen and pulse oximetry systems in Nigerian hospitals have been sustained over the medium-term and are a highly cost-effective child pneumonia intervention. BMJ Publishing Group 2022-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9379491/ /pubmed/35948344 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009278 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Graham, Hamish R
Bakare, Ayobami A
Ayede, Adejumoke Idowu
Eleyinmi, Joseph
Olatunde, Oyaniyi
Bakare, Oluwabunmi R
Edunwale, Blessing
Neal, Eleanor F G
Qazi, Shamim
McPake, Barbara
Peel, David
Gray, Amy Z
Duke, Trevor
Falade, Adegoke G
Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria
title Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria
title_full Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria
title_fullStr Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria
title_short Cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in Nigeria
title_sort cost-effectiveness and sustainability of improved hospital oxygen systems in nigeria
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9379491/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35948344
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009278
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