Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi

Abstract Background House improvement (HI) to prevent mosquito house entry, and larval source management (LSM) targeting aquatic mosquito stages to prevent development into adult forms, are promising complementary interventions to current malaria vector control strategies. Lack of evidence on costs...

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Main Authors: Mphatso Dennis Phiri, Robert S. McCann, Alinune Nathanael Kabaghe, Henk van den Berg, Tumaini Malenga, Steven Gowelo, Tinashe Tizifa, Willem Takken, Michèle van Vugt, Kamija S. Phiri, Dianne J. Terlouw, Eve Worrall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:Malaria Journal
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-021-03800-4
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language English
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author Mphatso Dennis Phiri
Robert S. McCann
Alinune Nathanael Kabaghe
Henk van den Berg
Tumaini Malenga
Steven Gowelo
Tinashe Tizifa
Willem Takken
Michèle van Vugt
Kamija S. Phiri
Dianne J. Terlouw
Eve Worrall
spellingShingle Mphatso Dennis Phiri
Robert S. McCann
Alinune Nathanael Kabaghe
Henk van den Berg
Tumaini Malenga
Steven Gowelo
Tinashe Tizifa
Willem Takken
Michèle van Vugt
Kamija S. Phiri
Dianne J. Terlouw
Eve Worrall
Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi
Malaria Journal
Malaria
Cost analysis
House improvement
Larval source management
Community-led
author_facet Mphatso Dennis Phiri
Robert S. McCann
Alinune Nathanael Kabaghe
Henk van den Berg
Tumaini Malenga
Steven Gowelo
Tinashe Tizifa
Willem Takken
Michèle van Vugt
Kamija S. Phiri
Dianne J. Terlouw
Eve Worrall
author_sort Mphatso Dennis Phiri
title Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi
title_short Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi
title_full Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi
title_fullStr Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in Malawi
title_sort cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in malawi
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background House improvement (HI) to prevent mosquito house entry, and larval source management (LSM) targeting aquatic mosquito stages to prevent development into adult forms, are promising complementary interventions to current malaria vector control strategies. Lack of evidence on costs and cost-effectiveness of community-led implementation of HI and LSM has hindered wide-scale adoption. This study presents an incremental cost analysis of community-led implementation of HI and LSM, in a cluster-randomized, factorial design trial, in addition to standard national malaria control interventions in a rural area (25,000 people), in southern Malawi. Methods In the trial, LSM comprised draining, filling, and Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis-based larviciding, while house improvement (henceforth HI) involved closing of eaves and gaps on walls, screening windows/ventilation spaces with wire mesh, and doorway modifications. Communities implemented all interventions. Costs were estimated retrospectively using the ‘ingredients approach’, combining ‘bottom-up’ and ‘top-down approaches’, from the societal perspective. To estimate the cost of independently implementing each intervention arm, resources shared between trial arms (e.g. overheads) were allocated to each consuming arm using proxies developed based on share of resource input quantities consumed. Incremental implementation costs (in 2017 US$) are presented for HI-only, LSM-only and HI + LSM arms. In sensitivity analyses, the effect of varying costs of important inputs on estimated costs was explored. Results The total economic programme costs of community-led HI and LSM implementation was $626,152. Incremental economic implementation costs of HI, LSM and HI + LSM were estimated as $27.04, $25.06 and $33.44, per person per year, respectively. Project staff, transport and labour costs, but not larvicide or screening material, were the major cost drivers across all interventions. Costs were sensitive to changes in staff costs and population covered. Conclusions In the trial, the incremental economic costs of community-led HI and LSM implementation were high compared to previous house improvement and LSM studies. Several factors, including intervention design, year-round LSM implementation and low human population density could explain the high costs. The factorial trial design necessitated use of proxies to allocate costs shared between trial arms, which limits generalizability where different designs are used. Nevertheless, costs may inform planners of similar intervention packages where cost-effectiveness is known. Trial registration Not applicable. The original trial was registered with The Pan African Clinical Trials Registry on 3 March 2016, trial number PACTR201604001501493
topic Malaria
Cost analysis
House improvement
Larval source management
Community-led
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-021-03800-4
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spelling doaj-7f66bd8f90b344d9a803c5fd0fbed5692021-06-20T11:47:07ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752021-06-0120111710.1186/s12936-021-03800-4Cost of community-led larval source management and house improvement for malaria control: a cost analysis within a cluster-randomized trial in a rural district in MalawiMphatso Dennis Phiri0Robert S. McCann1Alinune Nathanael Kabaghe2Henk van den Berg3Tumaini Malenga4Steven Gowelo5Tinashe Tizifa6Willem Takken7Michèle van Vugt8Kamija S. Phiri9Dianne J. Terlouw10Eve Worrall11Malaria Epidemiology Group, Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research ProgrammeLaboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University & ResearchSchool of Public Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of MalawiLaboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University & ResearchSchool of Public Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of MalawiSchool of Public Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of MalawiSchool of Public Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of MalawiLaboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University & ResearchCenter for Tropical Medicine and Travel Medicine, Department of Infectious Diseases, Division of Internal Medicine, Amsterdam-UMC, Location AMC, University of AmsterdamSchool of Public Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of MalawiMalaria Epidemiology Group, Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research ProgrammeLiverpool School of Tropical MedicineAbstract Background House improvement (HI) to prevent mosquito house entry, and larval source management (LSM) targeting aquatic mosquito stages to prevent development into adult forms, are promising complementary interventions to current malaria vector control strategies. Lack of evidence on costs and cost-effectiveness of community-led implementation of HI and LSM has hindered wide-scale adoption. This study presents an incremental cost analysis of community-led implementation of HI and LSM, in a cluster-randomized, factorial design trial, in addition to standard national malaria control interventions in a rural area (25,000 people), in southern Malawi. Methods In the trial, LSM comprised draining, filling, and Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis-based larviciding, while house improvement (henceforth HI) involved closing of eaves and gaps on walls, screening windows/ventilation spaces with wire mesh, and doorway modifications. Communities implemented all interventions. Costs were estimated retrospectively using the ‘ingredients approach’, combining ‘bottom-up’ and ‘top-down approaches’, from the societal perspective. To estimate the cost of independently implementing each intervention arm, resources shared between trial arms (e.g. overheads) were allocated to each consuming arm using proxies developed based on share of resource input quantities consumed. Incremental implementation costs (in 2017 US$) are presented for HI-only, LSM-only and HI + LSM arms. In sensitivity analyses, the effect of varying costs of important inputs on estimated costs was explored. Results The total economic programme costs of community-led HI and LSM implementation was $626,152. Incremental economic implementation costs of HI, LSM and HI + LSM were estimated as $27.04, $25.06 and $33.44, per person per year, respectively. Project staff, transport and labour costs, but not larvicide or screening material, were the major cost drivers across all interventions. Costs were sensitive to changes in staff costs and population covered. Conclusions In the trial, the incremental economic costs of community-led HI and LSM implementation were high compared to previous house improvement and LSM studies. Several factors, including intervention design, year-round LSM implementation and low human population density could explain the high costs. The factorial trial design necessitated use of proxies to allocate costs shared between trial arms, which limits generalizability where different designs are used. Nevertheless, costs may inform planners of similar intervention packages where cost-effectiveness is known. Trial registration Not applicable. The original trial was registered with The Pan African Clinical Trials Registry on 3 March 2016, trial number PACTR201604001501493https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-021-03800-4MalariaCost analysisHouse improvementLarval source managementCommunity-led