Cost-effectiveness analysis of human-centred design for global health interventions: a quantitative framework

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Date
2022Author
Liu, Chen
Hyoung Lee, Jae
Gupta, Amanda J.
Tucker, Austin
Larkin, Chris
Turimumahoro, Patricia
Katamba, Achilles
Davis, J, Lucian
Dowdy, David
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Show full item recordAbstract
Human-centred
design (HCD) is a
problem-solving
approach that is increasingly used to
develop new global health interventions. However, there
is often a large initial cost associated with HCD, and
global health decision-makers
would benefit from an
improved understanding of the cost-effectiveness
of HCD,
particularly the trade-offs
between the up-front
costs
of design and the long-term
costs of delivering health
interventions.
Methods We developed a quantitative framework from
a health systems perspective to illustrate the conditions
under which HCD-informed
interventions are likely to be
cost-effective,
taking into consideration five elements: cost
of HCD, per-client
intervention cost, anticipated number of
clients reached, anticipated incremental per-client
health
benefit (ie, disability-adjusted
life years (DALYs) averted)
and willingness-to-
pay.
We evaluated several combinations
of fixed and implementation cost scenarios based on
the estimated costs of an HCD-informed
approach to
tuberculosis (TB) contact investigation in Uganda over a
2-year
period to illustrate the use of this framework.
Results The cost-effectiveness
of HCD-informed
TB
contact investigation in Uganda was estimated to vary
from US$8400 (2400 clients reached, lower HCD cost
estimate) to US$306 000 per DALY averted (120 clients
reached, baseline HCD cost estimate). In our model, cost-effectiveness
was improved further when the interventions
were expected to have wider reach or higher per-client
health benefits.
Conclusion HCD can be cost-effective
when used to
inform interventions that are anticipated to reach a large
number of clients, or in which the cost of HCD is smaller
relative to the cost of delivering the intervention itself.
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- Medical and Health Sciences [2955]