Cost Effectiveness of Strategies for Caring for Critically Ill Patients with COVID-19 in Tanzania.

Hiral Anil Shah ORCID logo ; Tim Baker ORCID logo ; Carl Otto Schell ORCID logo ; August Kuwawenaruwa ORCID logo ; Khamis Awadh ; Karima Khalid ORCID logo ; Angela Kairu ORCID logo ; Vincent Were ORCID logo ; Edwine Barasa ORCID logo ; Peter Baker ORCID logo ; +1 more... Lorna Guinness ORCID logo ; (2023) Cost Effectiveness of Strategies for Caring for Critically Ill Patients with COVID-19 in Tanzania. PharmacoEconomics - open, 7 (4). pp. 537-552. ISSN 2509-4262 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-023-00418-x
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BACKGROUND: The resources for critical care are limited in many settings, exacerbating the significant morbidity and mortality associated with critical illness. Budget constraints can lead to choices between investing in advanced critical care (e.g. mechanical ventilators in intensive care units) or more basic critical care such as Essential Emergency and Critical Care (EECC; e.g. vital signs monitoring, oxygen therapy, and intravenous fluids). METHODS: We investigated the cost effectiveness of providing EECC and advanced critical care in Tanzania in comparison with providing 'no critical care' or 'district hospital-level critical care' using coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) as a tracer condition. We developed an open-source Markov model ( https://github.com/EECCnetwork/POETIC_CEA ) to estimate costs and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) averted, using a provider perspective, a 28-day time horizon, patient outcomes obtained from an elicitation method involving a seven-member expert group, a normative costing study, and published literature. We performed a univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analysis to assess the robustness of our results. , RESULTS: EECC is cost effective 94% and 99% of the time when compared with no critical care (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio [ICER] $37 [-$9 to $790] per DALY averted) and district hospital-level critical care (ICER $14 [-$200 to $263] per DALY averted), respectively, relative to the lowest identified estimate of the willingness-to-pay threshold for Tanzania ($101 per DALY averted). Advanced critical care is cost effective 27% and 40% of the time, when compared with the no critical care or district hospital-level critical care scenarios, respectively. CONCLUSION: For settings where there is limited or no critical care delivery, implementation of EECC could be a highly cost-effective investment. It could reduce mortality and morbidity for critically ill COVID-19 patients, and its cost effectiveness falls within the range considered 'highly cost effective'. Further research is needed to explore the potential of EECC to generate even greater benefits and value for money when patients with diagnoses other than COVID-19 are accounted for.


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