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J Infect Dis. 2011 Jul204 Suppl 1S98-106. doi 10.1093/infdis/jir096.
Global eradication of measles an epidemiologic and economic evaluation.
Levin A1 Burgess C Garrison LP Jr Bauch C Babigumira J Simons E Dabbagh A.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Measles remains an important cause of morbidity and mortality in children in developing countries. Due to the success of the measles mortality reduction and elimination efforts thus far the WHO has raised the question of whether global eradication ofmeasles is economically feasible.
METHODS
The cost-effectiveness of various measles mortality reduction and eradication scenarios was evaluated vis-à-vis the current mortality reduction goal in six countries and globally. Data collection on costs of measles vaccination were conducted in six countries in four regions Bangladesh Brazil Colombia Ethiopia Tajikistan and Uganda. The number of measles cases and deaths were projected from 2010 to 2050 using a dynamic age-structured compartmental model. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were then calculated for each scenario vis a vis the baseline.
RESULTS
Measles eradication by 2020 was the found to be the most cost-effective scenario both in the six countries and globally. Eradicating measles by 2020 is projected to cost an additional discounted $7.8 billion and avert a discounted 346 million DALYs between 2010 and 2050.
CONCLUSIONS
In conclusion the study found that compared to the baseline reaching measles eradication by 2020 would be the most cost-effective measles mortality reduction scenario both for the six countries and on a global basis.