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Catastrophic costs potentially averted by tuberculosis control in India and South Africa: a modelling study

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  • Stephane Verguet
  • Carlos Riumallo-Herl
  • Gabriela B. Gomez
  • Nicolas A. Menzies
  • Rein M. G. J. Houben
  • Tom Sumner
  • Marek Lalli
  • Richard G. White
  • Joshua A. Salomon
  • Ted Cohen
  • Nicola Foster
  • Susmita Chatterjee
  • Sedona Sweeney
  • Ines Garcia Baena
  • Knut Lonnroth
  • Diana E. Weil
  • Anna Vassall
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>1/11/2017
<mark>Journal</mark>Lancet Global Health
Issue number11
Volume5
Number of pages10
Pages (from-to)E1123-E1132
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

BackgroundThe economic burden on households affected by tuberculosis through costs to patients can be catastrophic. WHO's End TB Strategy recognises and aims to eliminate these potentially devastating economic effects. We assessed whether aggressive expansion of tuberculosis services might reduce catastrophic costs.MethodsWe estimated the reduction in tuberculosis-related catastrophic costs with an aggressive expansion of tuberculosis services in India and South Africa from 2016 to 2035, in line with the End TB Strategy. Using modelled incidence and mortality for tuberculosis and patient-incurred cost estimates, we investigated three intervention scenarios: improved treatment of drug-sensitive tuberculosis; improved treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; and expansion of access to tuberculosis care through intensified case finding (South Africa only). We defined tuberculosis-related catastrophic costs as the sum of direct medical, direct non-medical, and indirect costs to patients exceeding 20% of total annual household income. Intervention effects were quantified as changes in the number of households incurring catastrophic costs and were assessed by quintiles of household income.FindingsIn India and South Africa, improvements in treatment for drug-sensitive and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis could reduce the number of households incurring tuberculosis-related catastrophic costs by 6–19%. The benefits would be greatest for the poorest households. In South Africa, expanded access to care could decrease household tuberculosis-related catastrophic costs by 5–20%, but gains would be seen largely after 5–10 years.InterpretationAggressive expansion of tuberculosis services in India and South Africa could lessen, although not eliminate, the catastrophic financial burden on affected households.FundingBill & Melinda Gates Foundation.