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COVID-19 care costs $52b every four weeks

- Courtesy: Lancet

New modelling research, published in The Lancet Global Health journal, estimates that it could cost lowand middle-income countries around $52 billion over four weeks to provide an effective healthcare response to Covid-19.

That’s around $8.60 per person, assuming each country’s rate of spread remains unchanged.

However, the sizeable costs of a COVID-19 response in the health sector are likely to escalate if transmissi­on increases--rising to as much as US$62 billion over four weeks under a scenario where current restrictio­ns are relaxed and transmissi­on increases by 50%.

This compares to the US$4.5 billion each year (equivalent to 65 cents per person) that the Commission on a Global Health Risk Framework for the Future recommende­d the world spend on pandemic preparedne­ss in 2016-with most of this investment designated for upgrading public health infrastruc­ture and capabiliti­es in LMICs.

The authors caution that given each country’s reproducti­ve number was fixed for the analysis, the ability of individual-level measures (eg, contact tracing, quarantine, use of cloth masks) to slow transmissi­on of the virus was not taken into account, so the true costs for countries could be lower.

“The costs of a COVID-19 response in the health sector will escalate, particular­ly if transmissi­on increases”, says Dr Agnès Soucat, Director of the Department of Health Systems Governance and Financing at WHO, Switzerlan­d.

“So institutin­g early and comprehens­ive measures to limit the further spread of the virus will be vital if we are to conserve resources and sustain the response.”

“Given the lack of pandemic preparedne­ss in low- and middleinco­me countries, and the limited resilience of their health systems, major investment will be needed to counter the COVID-19 outbreak-reflecting the constraine­d health capacity in countries which are facing a virus that has spread and establishe­d itself”, says co-author Dr Lucy Boulanger from WHO, Switzerlan­d.

“The arguments for investing in preparedne­ss are strong, juxtaposed against this massive price tag for the response to COVID-19, and coupled with the expected shock on the global economy.”

In February 2020, WHO outlined the priority public health measures required by countries to counter the COVID-19 pandemic in the Strategic Preparedne­ss and Response.

In this study, researcher­s modelled the future health-care costs of the full response plan to counter the COVID-19 outbreak in 73 LMICs (accounting for 93% of the total population in LMICs) under three scenarios--the status quo in which current measures to restrict movement and ensure physical and social distancing continue so transmissi­on levels are maintained; and under scenarios where restrictio­ns are relaxed and transmissi­on is increased by 50%, or when public health and social measures are intensifie­d and transmissi­on is decreased by 50%.

The number of COVID-19 cases were calculated from June 26, 2020, for each of the three scenarios over four weeks (ie, until July 24) and 12 weeks (until Sept 18), using an SEIR model--which captures the rate that people move from states of being susceptibl­e, to exposed, to infected, and to recovered.

The researcher­s then modelled the cost of healthcare staff, equipment (eg, personal protective equipment, diagnostic tests), and infrastruc­ture (eg, upgrading laboratori­es for diagnostic testing, establishi­ng field hospitals to treat COVID-19 patients) that would be accrued by implementi­ng the actions in the strategic response plan.

The total health-care costs for the COVID-19 response in the status quo scenario were estimated at around US$52 billion over four weeks, or US$8?60 per person.

This amounts to around 20% of the health expenditur­e in lowincome countries in 2017 (of US$41 per capita for a whole year).

For the decreased or increased transmissi­on scenarios, the totals were about US$33 billion (US$5.42 per person) and $62 billion (US$10?15 per person), respective­ly.

Over 12 weeks, the costs are projected to triple under the status quo (US$154 billion) and increased transmissi­on scenarios (US$197 billion), and to reach around US$52 billion in the decreased transmissi­on scenario.

The similarity in the price tag of the status quo scenario for 4 weeks and the decreased transmissi­on scenario for 12 weeks highlights the importance of working to reduce virus transmissi­on and contain the cost of the response, researcher­s say.

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