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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

TitleChild survival and environmental health interventions : a cost-effectiveness analysis
Publication TypeMiscellaneous
Year of Publication1996
AuthorsVarley, RCG
Secondary TitleApplied study / EHP
Volumeno. 4
Paginationii, 26 p. : 1 fig., 5 tab.
Date Published1996-11-01
PublisherEnvironmental Health Project (EHP)
Place PublishedArlington, VA, USA
Keywordscab97/3, 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

Notes40 ref.
Custom 1203.1, 303

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