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vol.53 suppl.3Sistemas de información en salud en la región mesoamericanaDiseño mixto de evaluación de la iniciativa Salud Mesoamérica 2015 índice de autoresíndice de assuntospesquisa de artigos
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Salud Pública de México

versão impressa ISSN 0036-3634

Resumo

VALENCIA-MENDOZA, Atanacio; DANESE-DLSANTOS, Laura G; SOSA-RUBI, Sandra G  e  ARACENA-GENAO, Belkis. Cost-effectiveness of public health practices: A literature review of public health interventions from the Mesoamerican Health Initiative. Salud pública Méx [online]. 2011, vol.53, suppl.3, pp.s375-s385. ISSN 0036-3634.

OBJECTIVE: Present and analyze cost-effectiveness information of public health interventions proposed by the Mesoamerican Health Initiative in child nutrition, vaccination, malaria, dengue, and maternal, neonatal, and reproductive health. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A systematic literature review was conducted on cost-effectiveness studies published between January 2000 and August 2009 on interventions related to the health areas previously mentioned. Studies were included if they measured effectiveness in terms of Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY) or death averted. RESULTS: Child nutrition and maternal and neonatal health interventions were found to be highly cost-effective (most of them below US$200 per DALY averted for nutritional interventions and US$100 for maternal and neonatal health). For dengue, information on cost-effectiveness was found just for application of larvicides, which resulted in a cost per DALY averted ranking from US$40.79 to US$345.06. Malarial interventions were found to be cost-effective (below US$150 per DALY averted or US$4,000 per death averted within Africa). In the case of pneumococcus and rotavirus vaccination, cost-effectiveness estimates were always above one GDP per capita per DALY averted. CONCLUSIONS: In Mesoamerica there are still important challenges in child nutrition, vaccination, malaria, dengue and maternal, neonatal, and reproductive health, challenges that could be addressed by scaling-up technically feasible and cost-effective interventions.

Palavras-chave : Public health policy; cost effectiveness; public health; Mesoamerica.

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