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Title: | Public Health Benefits from Livestock Rift Valley Fever Control: A Simulation of Two Epidemics in Kenya |
Authors: | Kimani, Tabitha et.al |
Keywords: | Livestock Rift Valley Fever Control |
Issue Date: | Nov-2016 |
Publisher: | Open Access Library Journal |
Abstract: | In controlling Rift Valley fever, public health sector optimises health benefits by considering costeffective control options.Wemodelled cost-effectiveness of livestock RVF control from a public health perspective in Kenya. Analysis was limited to pastoral and agro-pastoral system high-risk areas, for a 10-year period incorporating two epidemics: 2006/2007 and a hypothetical one in 2014/2015. Four integrated strategies (baseline and alternatives), combined from three vaccination and two surveillance options, were compared. Baseline strategy included annual vaccination of 1.2–11% animals plus passive surveillance and monitoring of nine sentinel herds. Compared to the baseline, two alternatives assumed improved vaccination coverage. A herd dynamic RVF animal simulation model produced number of animals infected under each strategy. A second mathematical model implemented in R estimated number people who would be infected by the infected animals. The 2006/2007 RVF epidemic resulted in 3974 undiscounted, unweighted disability adjusted life years (DALYs). Improving vaccination coverage to 41–51% (2012) and 27–33% (2014) 3 years before the hypothetical 2014/2015 outbreak can avert close to 1200 DALYs. Improved vaccinations showed cost-effectiveness (CE) values of US$ 43–53 per DALY averted. The baseline practice is not cost-effective to the public health sector. |
URI: | http://41.89.96.81:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2640 |
Appears in Collections: | Faculty of Agriculture |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Public_Health_Benefits_from_Livestock_Rift_Valley_.pdf | 625.37 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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