1. Modelling the potential cost-effectiveness of food-based programs to reduce malnutrition
- Author
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Sarah Kranz, Patrick Webb, Goodarz Danaei, Dariush Mozaffarian, Mia M. Blakstad, Ashley A. Leech, William A. Masters, Katherine L. Rosettie, and Joshua T. Cohen
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030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Cost effectiveness ,Psychological intervention ,Article ,Poor quality ,03 medical and health sciences ,Environmental health ,0502 economics and business ,Medicine ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,Empirical evidence ,health care economics and organizations ,Nutrition ,computer.programming_language ,0303 health sciences ,Ecology ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Diets ,medicine.disease ,Malnutrition ,Food-based interventions ,Health ,Cost-effectiveness ,050202 agricultural economics & policy ,business ,Safety Research ,computer ,Delphi ,Food Science - Abstract
Poor quality diets contribute to malnutrition globally, but evidence is weak on the cost-effectiveness of food-based interventions that shift diets. This study assessed 11 candidate interventions developed through Delphi techniques to improve diets in India, Nigeria, and Ethiopia. A Markov simulation model incorporated time, individual-level, nutrition, and policy parameters to estimate health impacts and cost-effectiveness for reducing stunting, anaemia, diarrhea, and mortality in preschool children. At an assumed 80% coverage, interventions considered would potentially save between 0·16 and 3·20 years of life per child. The average cost-effectiveness ratio ranged from US$9 to US$2000 per life year saved. This approach, linking expert knowledge, known costs, and modelling, offers potential for estimating cost-effective investments for better informed policy choice where empirical evidence is limited., Highlights • Few studies estimate the potential cost-effectiveness of programs for improving health through diets. • Expert knowledge linked to modelling offers a basis for assessing potential alternatives where data are lacking. • Our analysis assessed 11 candidate interventions for Ethiopia, India, and Nigeria derived from local expert opinion. • Modelling demonstrates these programs' potential health impacts and cost-effectiveness. • The modelling of estimated benefits can support best-buy policy and program choices.
- Published
- 2021
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