Introduction
Methods
Definitions
Search strategy
PubMed | Results 16 July 2013 (for January 2003 to April 2013) | Results 1 August 2015 (for May 2013 to July 2015) | |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | “community health worker” OR “community health workers” OR “community health workers”[MeSH] | 1441 | 916 |
#2 | “health economics” OR “economics, medical”[MeSH] OR “economic evaluation” OR “health care costs” OR “health resource allocation” OR “health resource utilization” OR costs OR “costs and cost analysis”[MeSH] OR “cost analysis” OR “cost-benefit analysis”[MeSH] OR “cost effectiveness” OR “cost effective” OR “health care costs” OR “cost benefit analysis” OR “cost-benefit analysis”[MeSH] OR costly OR costing OR price OR prices OR expenditure OR “health expenditures”[MeSH] OR “value for money” OR budget OR budgets OR DALYs OR QALYs OR “quality-adjusted life years”[MeSH] | 96 561 | 64 724 |
#1 AND #2 | 134 | 113 |
Review approach
Results
Search results
Methodological area | Details of included studies |
---|---|
Study type | 17 economic evaluations, often comparing CHWs with facility-based practice |
5 articles looked at the costs and benefits of a single intervention or programme | |
10 articles included cost data only | |
Perspective | Provider or health system perspectives (n = 15) |
Wider societal perspectives (n = 14) | |
Three studies did not specify the perspective taken | |
Time horizon | Only four studies included a time horizon greater than 1 year |
The others (n = 28) either did not specify a time horizon or used 1 year | |
Sensitivity analysis | 17 studies performed a sensitivity analysis, the majority (n = 10) using a one-way or univariate analysis |
Variables used in the sensitivity analysis include the following: unit costs and quantities of provider and patient cost items, assumptions about training (varying the intensity, excluding one type of training and varying the cost of the training), varying discount and exchange rates, administrative support, useful life of capital items and effectiveness data, including CHW salaries, including inclusion of life years saved and deaths averted |
Study | Country | Type of CHW | Description | Type of study and perspective | Programme costs included | Patient costs included | Narrative conclusion on cost and/or cost-effectiveness | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Training | Capital | Recurrent | Joint/overhead | |||||||
Maternal health
| ||||||||||
Alem et al. 2012 [27] | Bangladesh | CHWs | Dissemination of health messages, identifying pregnancies, bringing pregnant women to birthing huts, accompanying them during their delivery and providing newborn care by CHWs. | Costing of CHW dropout from a provider perspective. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | CHW dropout after training and working for 1 month leads to foregone health services as well as recruitment and training of replacements. With an additional investment double the initial investment per CHW, the organization reduces dropout, can make additional cost savings (not recruiting and training a replacement) and fewer services are foregone in the community. |
Sutherland and Bishai. 2009 [39] | India | Village health workers (VHWs) | Simulation study on maternal health: prevention of PPH and anaemia by VHWs. | Cost-effectiveness study from a provider perspective. | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Misoprostol prevention and treatment provided by VHWs are both more cost-effective than standard care (although standard care is not defined). Treatment is significantly more cost-effective than prevention in terms of cost per life saved. |
Sutherland et al. 2010 [40] | India | VHWs | Simulation study on prevention of PPH by VHWs. | Cost-effectiveness study from a provider perspective. | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Misoprostol prevention and treatment provided by VHWs are both more cost-effective than standard care (although standard care is not defined). Treatment is significantly more cost-effective than prevention in terms of cost per life saved. |
Chin-Quee 2013 [26] | Zambia | CHWs | Family planning intervention by CHWs | Costs and benefits of a single intervention from a programme perspective. | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Provision of injectable contraceptives by CHWs can be done at low cost when added to an existing community-based distribution package. |
Neonatal health
| ||||||||||
Borghi et al. 2005 [11] | Nepal | Women group facilitators | Maternal health intervention with women’s groups. | Economic evaluation with provider perspective alongside RCT | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Women groups facilitated by lay health workers could provide a cost-effective way of reducing neonatal deaths compared to current practice. |
Chola et al. 2011 [28] | Uganda | Peer supporters | Breastfeeding intervention delivered by local women trained as peer supporters. | Costing study from a local provider perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | The use of local women trained as peer supporters to individually counsel women about exclusive breast feeding can be implemented in sub-Saharan Africa at a “sustainable cost”. |
Sabin et al. 2012 [38] | Zambia | Traditional birth attendants (TBAs) | Neonatal healthcare delivered by trained TBAs. | Costing and cost-effectiveness study alongside RCT; financial analysis based on trial costs only then expanded to intervention economic costs from societal perspective | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | The strategy of using trained TBAs to perform the neonatal resuscitation protocol (NRP) and antibiotics with facilitated referral to a health centre (AFR) to reduce neonatal mortality was found to be highly cost-effective as compared to GDP per capita and per WHO guidelines in Zambia. |
Child health
| ||||||||||
Fiedler 2003 [16] | Honduras | Monitors/CHWs | Growth monitoring of children under two by CHWs. The CHW treats and refers children under five to health services. | Costing study from a health service perspective. | Yes | Unclear | Yes | No | No | CHW programme cost 11% of the facility-based alternative while saving outpatient visits and costs. |
Fiedler et al. 2008 [17] | Honduras | Monitors/CHWs | Growth monitoring of children under two by CHWs. The CHW treats and refers children under five to health services. | Costing study from a health service perspective | Yes | Unclear | Yes | No | No | CHW programme cost 11% of the facility-based alternative while saving outpatient visits and costs. |
Nonvignon et al. 2012 [19] | Ghana | CHWs | CHW home management of malaria using two different drugs, by voluntary community-based agents in Ghana. | Cost-effectiveness study with a societal perspective | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Home management of under-five fevers by trained, unpaid community volunteers through diagnosis and dispensing of antimalarials and/or antibiotics was found to be a cost-effective strategy (in terms of cost per DALY averted compared with threshold recommended by WHO) for reducing under-five mortality in this setting. |
Prinja et al. 2013 [36] | India | Auxiliary nurse midwives (ANM), anganwadi workers (AWW) and accredited social health activists (ASHA) | Comparison of costs of integrated management of neonatal and childhood illnesses (IMNCI) and no IMNCI. | Economic evaluation from a programme perspective nested in an effectiveness trial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Implementation of IMNCI imposes additional costs to the health system; cost-effectiveness needs to be assessed in a comprehensive economic evaluation. |
Puett et al. 2013 [37] | Bangladesh | CHWs | Comparison of home management of severe acute nutrition versus facility-based inpatient treatment. | Cos-effectiveness study from a societal perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Treatment of severe acute malnutrition by CHWs is highly cost-effective compared to facility-based treatment. |
Tozan et al. 2010 [23] | Africa | CHWs | A community-based pre-referral artesunate treatment and referral programme by CHWs for children suspected to have severe malaria in areas with poor access to formal healthcare in rural Africa. | Cost and effects of single intervention from a provider perspective | Unclear | No | Yes | No | No | Pre-referral artesunate treatment delivered by CHWs is a cost-effective (as compared to GDP per capita and per WHO guidelines), life-saving intervention, which can substantially improve the management of severe childhood malaria in rural African settings. |
Tuberculosis
| ||||||||||
Clarke et al. 2006 [14] | South Africa | Lay health workers (LHWs) | Tuberculosis treatment adherence and counselling by trained LHWs on farms. | Cost-effectiveness analysis alongside RCT from a health district perspective | No | Unclear | Yes | No | No | Costs to public budgets can be substantially reduced while maintaining or improving case detection and treatment outcomes, by using farm-based LHWs. |
Datiko and Lindtjørn 2010 [15] | Ethiopia | Health extension workers (HEWs) | HEWs administered DOT for 2 months during intensive phase at health post, gave out drugs on monthly basis during continuation phase. | Cost and cost-effectiveness as part of randomized trial from a societal perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Involving HEWs in TB treatment is cost-effective alternative to health facility delivery. |
Floyd et al. 2003 [18] | Malawi | Guardians | Out-patient DOT at health facilities (by CHW) or by community member guardian (only new smear-negative patients), handing out drugs in an urban setting. | Cost and cost-effectiveness from a societal perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | When new smear-positive and smear-negative patients were considered together, the new strategies were associated with a 50% reduction in total annual costs compared with the strategy used until end of October 1997 which did not require any direct observation of treatment. |
Okello et al. 2003 [20] | Uganda | Community volunteers | DOT at community level by village-based volunteers. | Cost-effectiveness study from a societal perspective | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Findings suggest there is a strong economic case for replacing hospital admission for the first 2 months of treatment followed by 6 months of daily unsupervised outpatient treatment with community-based care in Uganda, provided it is accompanied by strong investment in activities such as training, community mobilization and programme supervision. |
Prado et al. 2011 [21] | Brazil | Trained guardians and CHWs | TB care in an urban setting. | Cost-effectiveness study from a societal perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Guardian-supervised DOT is an attractive option to complement CHW-supervised DOT. |
Sinanovic et al. 2003 [22] | South Africa | CHWs/LHWs | New smear-positive pulmonary and retreatment patients receiving treatment for TB by CHWs/LHWs. | Economic evaluation from a societal perspective as part of a prospective cohort study | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Community-based care is a cost-effective strategy for TB treatment compared with the facility alternative. |
Malaria
| ||||||||||
Chanda et al. 2011 [13] | Zambia | CHWs | CHWs using rapid diagnostic test for malaria in Zambia. Complicated malaria cases and non-malaria febrile cases were referred to the nearest health facility for further management. Uncomplicated malaria cases were treated by the CHW using artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). | Cost-effectiveness study from a provider perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Home management of uncomplicated malaria by CHWs was 36% more cost-effective than the standard of care at health facility level in this setting. |
Conteh et al. 2010 [29] | Ghana | Community-based volunteers | Community-based volunteers delivered three different intermittent preventive treatments for malaria in children (IPTc) drug regimens to children aged 3–59 months. | Economic evaluation alongside RCT from a societal perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Delivery of IPT for children by VVHWs is less costly than delivery by nurses working at outpatient departments or EPI outreach. |
Hamainza et al. 2014 [24] | Zambia | CHWs | Home-based case detection and treatment of malaria with rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) by CHWs versus facility care. | Costing study from a programme perspective alongside a longitudinal study. | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | No | This way of delivering testing and treatment may be cost-effective at certain levels if community participation in regular testing is achieved. |
Mbonye et al. 2008 [31] | Uganda | TBAs, drug-shop vendors, community reproductive health workers and adolescent peer mobilizers | Directly observed sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) therapy delivered by trained community resource persons to pregnant women through home visits during second and third trimester in a rural setting. | Cost-effectiveness study from both provider and patient perspectives | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Community-based delivery of SP during pregnancy increased access and adherence to IPTp and was cost-effective according to World Bank criteria. |
Onwujekwe et al. 2007 [41] | Nigeria | CHWs | Community members conducted treatment of presumptive malaria in uncomplicated adults and children. | Costs and benefits of a single intervention from both provider and community perspectives | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | CHWs are an economically viable and “potentially cost-effective” (no comparator or benchmark given) source for providing timely, appropriate treatment of malaria in rural areas. |
Patouillard et al. 2011 [33] | Ghana | VHWs | VHWS dispensed IPTc during three consecutive scheduled days from a central point of each village. | Costing study from a provider perspective alongside community randomized trial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Delivery of IPT for children by VHWs is less costly then delivery by nurses working at outpatient departments or EPI outreach. |
Other or multiple disease areas
| ||||||||||
Bowser et al. 2015 [34] | Mozambique | CHWs | Multi-year comparison of costs and benefits of delivery by CHWs of specialized targeted package of primary care interventions including family planning, maternal health, malaria, diarrhoea, pneumonia, TB, HIV, malnutrition and more. | Cost-effectiveness study taking a programme perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Using CHWs to deliver a range of primary care services can be less costly than other community-based programmes. |
Buttorf et al. 2012 [12] | India | LHWs | LHWs/counsellors counselled on mental disorders. | Economic evaluation from a societal perspective alongside RCT | No | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | LHW intervention resulted in cost savings from both a provider and patient perspective and achieved the same outcomes, making it more cost-effective than standard care at public primary care facilities. |
Gaziano et al. 2014 [42] | South Africa | CHWs | This study compares CHWs visiting patients with uncontrolled hypertension two times a year with undefined usual care. | Cost-utility study using a Markov model, perspective undefined | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | No | The intervention is cost-saving, with the life cost being less than the annual cost due to reductions in non-fatal cardiovascular disease-related events. |
Jafar et al. 2011 [30] | Pakistan | CHWs | CHWs provided advice at three monthly intervals on the importance of physical activity, diet and smoking cessation. | Cost-effectiveness study from a societal perspective alongside RCT | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | A combined intervention of HHE plus training of general practitioners to control high blood pressure is the most cost-effective solution as compared with other options. |
Mahmud et al. 2010 [25] | Malawi | CHWs | CHWs using text messages delivered a variety of services including requesting medication deliveries, notifying patient deaths, sending appointment reminders, monitoring treatment adherence for TB DOTS and ART, queries and more. | Costing study with unspecified perspective (seems to be hospital) | No | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | No | m-health intervention delivered by CHWs resulted in both professional worker time and monetary savings compared with previous practice (a CHW programme without the m-health intervention). |
McCord et al. 2013 [32] | Sub-Saharan Africa | CHWs | Various (diarrhoea, malaria, malnutrition, TB screening, pneumonia, management of pregnancy and health promotion). | Costing study from unspecified perspective (seems to be programme) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Comprehensive CHW subsystems can be deployed across sub-Saharan Africa at a cost that is modest compared with project costs of primary healthcare system. |
Prinja et al. 2014 [35] | India | Auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs), multi-purpose health workers (MPHWs) and accredited social health activist (ASHA) workers | Range of primary care services delivered by three types of CHWs at the sub-centre health facility level; study compares having one ANM with two ANMs. | Costing and cost-effectiveness study from a health system perspective | Unclear | Yes | Yes | No | No | Hiring a second ANM at the sub-centre level is very cost-effective given the incremental cost per unit increase in ANC coverage. |
Types of CHWs, setting and health priorities
Costs
Outcomes
Outcomes at the level of health status and well-being | |
TB studies | Sputum smear results |
TB cure rate | |
Treatment completion rate | |
Treatment success rate | |
Malaria studies | Incidence of malaria and anaemia |
MNCH studies | Neonatal mortality |
Deaths averted | |
DALYs averted | |
Incidence of acute PPH and severe PPH cases | |
Anaemia cases averted | |
Other studies | Systolic blood pressure |
Presence/absence of depression or anxiety | |
Intermediate outcomes: patient level | |
Number of patients registered or who received treatment | |
Increased patient enrollment | |
Number of patients counselled | |
Number of patient visits made | |
Number of referrals made | |
Proportion of cases appropriately diagnosed and treated | |
Number of doses taken by patients | |
Weeks of exclusive breastfeeding | |
Couple years of protection | |
Intermediate outcome: health worker level | |
Professional health worker time gained |