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http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/111/6/1289
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Hepatitis B |
PEDIATRICS Vol. 111 No. 6 June 2003, pp. 1289-1296
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* National Immunization Program, CDC, Public Health Service, US
Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta, Georgia
Suc Khoe La Vang! (Health is Gold), the VCHPP, Division of General
Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California San
Francisco, San Francisco, California
Objective. To ascertain the cost-effectiveness and benefit-cost ratios of 2 public health campaigns conducted in Dallas and Houston in 1998–2000 for "catch-up" hepatitis B vaccination of Vietnamese-Americans born 1984–1993.
Design. Program evaluation.
Setting. Houston and Dallas, Texas.
Participants. A total of 14 349 Vietnamese-American children and adolescents.
Interventions. Media-led information and education campaign in Houston, and community mobilization strategy in Dallas. Outcomes were compared with a control site: Washington, DC.
Main outcome measures. Receipt of 1, 2, or 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine before and after the interventions, costs of interventions, cost-effectiveness ratios for intermediate outcomes, intervention cost per discounted year of life saved, and benefit-cost ratio of the interventions.
Results. The number of children who completed the series of 3 hepatitis B vaccine doses increased by 1176 at a total cost of $313 904 for media intervention, and by 390 and at $169 561 for community mobilization. Costs per child receiving any dose, per dose, and per completed series were $363, $101, and $267 for media intervention and $387, $136, and $434 for community mobilization, respectively. For media intervention, the intervention cost per discounted year of life saved was $9954 and 131 years of life were saved; for community mobilization, estimates were $11 759 and 60 years of life. The benefit-cost ratio was 5.26:1 for media intervention and 4.47:1 for community mobilization.
Conclusion. Although the increases in the number of children who completed series of 3 doses were modest for both the Houston and Dallas areas, both media education and, to a lesser degree, community mobilization interventions proved cost-effective and cost-beneficial.
Key Words: cost-effectiveness analysis • benefit-cost analysis • hepatitis B vaccination • media education • community mobilization • Vietnamese-Americans
Abbreviations: HBV, hepatitis B virus • HepB, hepatitis B vaccine • VFC, Vaccines for Children • ACIP, Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices • CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention • API, Asian and Pacific Islander • VCHPP, Vietnamese Community Health Promotion Project • CE, cost-effectiveness
Received for publication Aug 8, 2002; accepted Nov 20, 2002.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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S. J. McPhee, T. Nguyen, G. L. Euler, J. Mock, C. Wong, T. Lam, W. Nguyen, S. Nguyen, M. Q. Huynh Ha, S. T. Do, and C. Buu Successful Promotion of Hepatitis B Vaccinations Among Vietnamese-American Children Ages 3 to 18: Results of a Controlled Trial Pediatrics, June 1, 2003; 111(6): 1278 - 1288. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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