哥伦比亚室内喷洒和蚊帐浸渍残留杀虫剂的单位费用:控制病媒传播疾病的管理工具

A. Kroeger, C. Ayala, A. M. Lara
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引用次数: 20

摘要

摘要在哥伦比亚11个疟疾流行州(省)开展了两种疟疾控制策略(室内喷洒和蚊帐浸渍残留杀虫剂)的单位成本和成本构成研究,采用控制工作人员自行填写的调查问卷提供的数据。数据的准确性通过个人访问、电话交谈和来自其他10个州的补充信息得到了验证。记录了过去6个月进行的疟疾防治行动的所有财务费用组成部分以及防治行动本身的结果(包括每天喷洒的房屋数量和浸渍的蚊帐数量)。根据目标社区离行动基地是“近”还是“远”,这些信息被分层,远的社区是那些需要控制人员过夜的社区。分析的主要变量是单位成本/房屋处理和年成本/人保护。结果表明,对于卫生服务来说,房屋喷洒通常比蚊帐浸渍更昂贵。在“附近”社区尤其如此,那里是大多数高危人群居住的地方。在这样的社区,喷洒一所房子的费用是一顶蚊帐的7.2倍。即使假设只有那些睡在浸渍蚊帐下的人得到了保护,在“附近”社区,房屋喷洒的单位成本比蚊帐浸渍的单位成本高两倍。在“附近”的社区,技术人员每天晚上都可以回到操作基地,杀虫剂占总喷洒成本的80%,占蚊帐浸渍成本的42%。然而,在“偏远”社区,工资和“每日津贴”是最重要的成本组成部分,分别占喷洒成本的23%和22%,占浸渍成本的34%和27%。杀虫剂浪费和不使用杀虫剂价格折扣(通过国家卫生部提供)大大增加了总成本。提出了这些成本计算对地区卫生管理人员的多种用途。
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Unit costs for house spraying and bednet impregnation with residual insecticides in Colombia: a management tool for the control of vector-borne disease
Abstract A study of unit costs and cost components of two malaria-control strategies (house spraying and bednet impregnation with residual insecticides) was undertaken in 11 malaria-endemic states (departamentos) of Colombia, using data provided by control staff on self-administered questionnaires. The accuracy of the data was verified by personal visits, telephone conversations and complementary information from 10 other states. Allthe financial-cost components of the malaria-control operations carried out in the previous 6 months and the results of the control operations themselves (including the numbers of houses sprayed and numbers of bednets impregnated/day) were recorded. The information was stratified according to whether the target communities were 'near' or 'far away' from an operational base, the far-away communities being those that needed overnight stays by the control staff. The main variables analysed were unit costs/house treated, and annual cost/person protected. The results show that house spraying was generally more expensive for the health services than bednet impregnation. This is particularly the case in 'nearby' communities, where most of those at-risk live. In such communities, spraying one house was 7.2 times more expensive than impregnating one bednet. Even if only those sleeping under an impregnated net were assumed to be protected, the unit costs/person protected in a 'nearby' community were twice as high for house spraying than for bednet impregnation. In 'nearby' communities, where technicians could return to the operational base each evening, insecticides made up 80% of the total spraying costs and 42% of the costs of bednet impregnation. In 'far-away' communities, however, salaries and 'per diems' were the most important cost components, representing, respectively, 23% and 22% of the costs of spraying, and 34% plus 27% of the costs of impregnation. Insecticide wastage and non-use of discounts on insecticide prices (available through the national Ministry of Health) increased the overall costs considerably. The multiple uses of these cost calculations for district health managers are presented.
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