Health and economic benefits of public financing of epilepsy treatment in India: An agent-based simulation model
Authored by Itamar Megiddo, Arindam Nandi, Ramanan Laxminarayan, Abigail Colson, Dan Chisholm, Tarun Dua
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/epi.13294
Sponsors:
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
ObjectiveAn estimated 6-10 million people in India live with active
epilepsy, and less than half are treated. We analyze the health and
economic benefits of three scenarios of publicly financed national
epilepsy programs that provide: (1) first-line antiepilepsy drugs
(AEDs), (2) first- and second-line AEDs, and (3) first- and second-line
AEDs and surgery.
MethodsWe model the prevalence and distribution of epilepsy in India
using IndiaSim, an agent-based, simulation model of the Indian
population. Agents in the model are disease-free or in one of three
disease states: untreated with seizures, treated with seizures, and
treated without seizures. Outcome measures include the proportion of the
population that has epilepsy and is untreated, disability-adjusted life
years (DALYs) averted, and cost per DALY averted. Economic benefit
measures estimated include out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditure averted and
money-metric value of insurance.
ResultsAll three scenarios represent a cost-effective use of resources
and would avert 800,000-1 million DALYs per year in India relative to
the current scenario. However, especially in poor regions and
populations, scenario 1 (which publicly finances only first-line
therapy) does not decrease the OOP expenditure or provide financial risk
protection if we include care-seeking costs. The OOP expenditure averted
increases from scenarios 1 through 3, and the money-metric value of
insurance follows a similar trend between scenarios and typically
decreases with wealth. In the first 10 years of scenarios 2 and 3, households avert on average over US\$80 million per year in medical
expenditure.
SignificanceExpanding and publicly financing epilepsy treatment in India
averts substantial disease burden. A universal public finance policy
that covers only first-line AEDs may not provide significant financial
risk protection. Covering costs for both first- and second-line therapy
and other medical costs alleviates the financial burden from epilepsy
and is cost-effective across wealth quintiles and in all Indian states.
Tags
knowledge
population
cost-effectiveness
Attitudes
Prevalence
Strategies
Program
Countries
Treatment gap
Surgery