A comparison of the cost-effectiveness of alternative approaches to the treatment of severly malnourished children
1994
A longitudinal, prospective and controlled trial was undertaken to identify the most
cost-effective treatment for children with severe malnutrition. Children <60%
weight-for-height or with oedema aged 12-60 months, were sequentially allocated
to i) in-patient treatment ii) day-care treatment iii) domiciliary management after
one week of day-care. Institutional and parental costs incurred to reach 80%
weight-for-height are compared. The groups were comparable as regards age,
sex, nutritional status, presence of infection and socioeconomic status at
recruitment. A total of 437 children completed the study. Mortality during
treatment was low in all groups <5%). Although the domiciliary group took the
longest to achieve 80% weight-for-height they did so at the lowest overall cost.
Day-care treatment approached in-patient care as regards speed of recovery at less
than half the total cost, but it was an unpopular option and only 4% gave this as
their preference. Although parental costs were highest for the domiciliary group as
no food supplements were provided, this was the majority's preference (67%)
especially among the group who experienced it.
Children continued to be followed for one year after they reached 80% weight-for-height to determine longer-term progress. Data were collected fortnightly for
morbidity and monthly for anthropometry, mortality and relapse rates. All three
groups increased in weight-for-height during the year from 80% to 91 % on average
but no increase was observed in height-for age. There was a high prevalence of
infection with an average incidence of 7 diarrhoeal episodes, and 30% presented
with acute respiratory infection on more than 3 occasions. Without access to
medical care it is likely that many would have relapsed. Only 0.6% however
required readmission for severe malnutrition and 1.6% died.
It is concluded that domiciliary management after 1 week of medical care is a cost effective option for treating severe malnutrition.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
0
References
4
Citations
NaN
KQI