In 1979 Walsh and Warren, published an influential short article* which argued that there was gross disparity between the cost-effectiveness of water supply and sanitation, costed at $10,000 per death averted in 1996 prices, and selective primary health c
Title | Child survival and environmental health interventions : a cost-effectiveness analysis |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 1996 |
Authors | Varley, RCG |
Secondary Title | Applied study / EHP |
Volume | no. 4 |
Pagination | ii, 26 p. : 1 fig., 5 tab. |
Date Published | 1996-11-01 |
Publisher | Environmental Health Project (EHP) |
Place Published | Arlington, VA, USA |
Keywords | cab97/3, child health, cost benefit analysis, excreta disposal systems, food hygiene, health impact, household hygiene, models, personal hygiene, safe water supply |
Abstract | In 1979 Walsh and Warren, published an influential short article* which argued that there was gross disparity between the cost-effectiveness of water supply and sanitation, costed at $10,000 per death averted in 1996 prices, and selective primary health care, costed at $600-750 per death averted in 1996 prices. This seemed to many a justification for ignoring water supply and sanitation. This paper presents a new model of cost-effectiveness which shows that when cost-effectiveness analysis is limited to health-sector costs, environmental health interventions are clearly as cost-effective as many of the well-known child survival interventions. The paper is presented in six chapters. Following a brief introduction, chapter 2 describes a framework developed by the Environmental Health Project (EHP) for integrating environmental health interventions with child survival. Chapter 3 discusses the impact and effectiveness of hygiene interventions that can be used to control childhood diarrhoea. It uses these as an example to show how the cost-effectiveness model can be applied. Chapter 4 explains the principles underlying the proposed cost-effectiveness model and how the costs of the interventions were estimated. Chapter 5 presents the results obtained by applying the model. Chapter 6, the final chapter, presents conclusions and recommendations. *Walsh, Julia A., and Kenneth S. Warren (1979). Selective primary health care: An interim strategy for disease control in developing countries. The New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 301, no. 18, p. 967-974 |
Notes | 40 ref. |
Custom 1 | 203.1, 303 |