Cost-effectiveness of misoprostol to control postpartum hemorrhage in low-resource settings. |
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Authors: | S E K Bradley N Prata N Young-Lin D M Bishai |
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Affiliation: | Constella Futures, One Thomas Circle NW, Washington, DC, USA. sebradle@jhsph.edu |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVE: To test the cost-effectiveness of training traditional birth attendants (TBAs) to recognize postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) and administer a rectal dose of misoprostol in areas with low access to modern delivery facilities. METHOD: A cost-effectiveness analysis, modeling two hypothetical cohorts of 10,000 women each giving birth with TBAs: one under standard treatment (TBA referral to hospital after blood loss >or=500 ml), and one attended by TBAs trained to recognize PPH and to administer 1000 microg of misoprostol at blood loss >or=500 ml. RESULT: The misoprostol strategy could prevent 1647 cases of severe PPH (range: 810-2920) and save $115,335 in costs of referral, IV therapy and transfusions (range: $13,991-$1,563,593) per 10,000 births. By preventing severe disease and saving money, it dominates the standard approach. CONCLUSION: Training TBAs to administer misoprostol to treat PPH has the potential to both save money and improve the health of mothers in low-resource settings. |
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Keywords: | Maternal morbidity Cost-effectiveness Postpartum hemorrhage, misoprostol Traditional birth attendants |
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