A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Timely Otitis Media Treatment through a Community Health Worker Delivered School Screening Program
Date
2023-04-19
Author
Advisors
Ogbuoji, Osondu
Sanders Schmidler, Gillian
Yamey, Gavin
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Abstract
In certain settings, otitis-media related hearing loss forms a large proportion of
total hearing loss cases. Delays to timely otitis media diagnosis and appropriate
treatment leads to more serious otitis media cases, sometimes chronic suppurative
otitis media, which may lead to a permanent hearing loss. A primary driver in the
delay to diagnosis and treatment is a lack of easily accessed, trained healthcare
workers in the identification and treatment of otitis media. We used an exemplar setting,
Zambia, to understand the costs and potential effects of community health worker-delivered
screening program for school-age children. The goal of this analysis was to highlight
otitis media as a driver of hearing loss and understand the cost-effectiveness of
timely diagnosis/treatment to prevent downstream hearing loss. The treatment pathway
for otitis media treatment was identified using a cascade of care framework, as well
as the effects of increased otitis media treatment access though stakeholder engagement
metrics. The treatment for otitis media in this analysis was conservative treatment,
aural toileting and topical antibiotics. Additionally, the costs of otitis media and
chronic suppurative otitis media and the proportion of both metrics treated in Nigeria
were found. Training costs of a program were included in the treatment pathway to
adequately model the scale-up strategy. Simulated persons experience yearly age- and
sex- specific probabilities of acquiring hearing loss, the prevalence of which is
3.6% in Nigeria. The population of interest was six-year-old children in Nigeria suffering
from otitis media across their lifetime. Strategies for comparison to increase appropriate
treatment of otitis media included current care and the implementation of a community
health worker-delivered screening program.
Main measures included lifetime undiscounted and discounted (3%/year) costs and QALYs
and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) by Nigerian standard (<3x $2,097.09
was considered cost-effective). Current detection (CD) resulted in 19.22 discounted
average person-years of otitis media treatment compared to 19.23 discounted average
person-years with implementation of a CHW delivered screening program. Lifetime total
per-person undiscounted costs were $64.26 USD for CD and $62.26 USD with the screening
program intervention, indicating that the screen is both less costly and more effective
than not screening. Results were most sensitive to variations in cost of screen, cost
of CSOM, rAOM, pOME resolution from screening, and CI device cost.
Limitations included input uncertainty given limited data sources for similar settings.
Additionally, we had to use a utility decrement for moderate hearing loss since there
is not one in the model that we identified specifically for CSOM. We project that
a community health worker delivered screening program is cost-effective by US standards.
Further research is needed to determine whether screening at younger ages or different
treatments for otitis media is cost-effective.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
Global Health InstitutePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27073Citation
Johri, Mohini (2023). A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Timely Otitis Media Treatment through a Community
Health Worker Delivered School Screening Program. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27073.Collections
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