key: cord-0026097-6cq4eopc authors: Aerts, Céline; Leahy, Shannon; Mucasse, Humberto; Lala, Sanjay; Bramugy, Justina; Tann, Cally J; Madhi, Shabir A; Bardají, Azucena; Bassat, Quique; Dangor, Ziyaad; Lawn, Joy E; Jit, Mark; Procter, Simon R title: Quantifying the Acute Care Costs of Neonatal Bacterial Sepsis and Meningitis in Mozambique and South Africa date: 2021-11-02 journal: Clin Infect Dis DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciab815 sha: 43f7dd28518cba50cce09ccb5e9990543438ec73 doc_id: 26097 cord_uid: 6cq4eopc BACKGROUND: Sepsis and meningitis are among the leading causes of neonatal deaths in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Neonatal sepsis caused ~400 000 deaths globally in 2015, half occurring in Africa. Despite this, there are few published data on the acute costs of neonatal sepsis or meningitis, with none in SSA. METHODS: We enrolled neonates admitted to 2 hospitals in South Africa and Mozambique between 16 April 2020 and 1 April 2021. In South Africa all cases were microbiologically confirmed, but in Mozambique both clinically suspected and microbiologically confirmed cases were included. Data were collected on healthcare resource use and length of stay, along with information on household expenditure and caregiving. We used unit costs of healthcare resources in local currencies to estimate healthcare provider costs per patient and costs per household. Results were converted to 2019 international dollars (I$). RESULTS: We enrolled 11 neonates in Mozambique and 18 neonates in South Africa. Mean length of stay was 10 days (median, 9 [interquartile range {IQR}, 4–14) and 16 days (median, 15 [IQR, 13–18]), respectively. In Mozambique we estimated mean household costs of I$49.62 (median, 10.19 [IQR, 5.10–95.12]) and hospitalization costs of I$307.58 (median, 275.12 [IQR, 149.43–386.12]). In South Africa these costs were I$52.31 (median, 30.82 [IQR, 19.25–73.08]) and I$684.06 (median, 653.62 [IQR, 543.33–827.53]), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: We found substantial costs associated with acute neonatal bacterial (all-cause) sepsis and meningitis in SSA. Our estimates will inform economic evaluations of interventions to prevent neonatal invasive bacterial infections. Globally, the few published studies on acute healthcare costs of neonatal sepsis and/or meningitis are from high-income countries, and mainly from the United States. There are no studies from sub-Saharan Africa despite the high disease burden in this region. Our study provides estimates of health care and household costs associated with acute neonatal sepsis and meningitis hospitalisations in Mozambique and South Africa. Using hospital records and discharge questionnaires of 29 neonates hospitalized in Mozambique and South Africa, we estimated mean costs to households and healthcare providers to be I$49.62 (median=10.19, IQR=5.10-95.12) and I$307.58 (median=275.12; IQR=149.43-386.12), and I$52.31 (median=30.82; IQR=19.25-73.08) and I$684.06 (me-dian=653.62; IQR=543.33-827.53), respectively in 2019 I$. Neonatal complications including infections are an important cost to health systems and families, and are an important consideration for inclusion in financial protection schemes. Interventions to prevent neonatal sepsis and meningitis could reduce the costs to healthcare providers and households, as well as improving health outcomes. Our results could be used in future research on the cost-effectiveness of interventions to prevent neonatal bacterial infections. Further costing studies with larger study populations, across a range of hospital settings and countries, and using similar tools to ours would make findings more generalisable and give insights into cost drivers and contextual differences. Although child mortality has halved in the last 2 decades, deaths in the neonatal period accounted for a larger proportion, approximately 47% (2.4 million) of all under-5 deaths in 2019 [1] . The highest neonatal mortality rate is in the sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region (United Nations), with sepsis and meningitis among the leading causes of neonatal deaths [2] . Neonatal sepsis, due to pathogens including group B Streptococcus (GBS), led to about 400 000 deaths globally in 2015, half of which occurred in the African region [3] . Despite this, there are few published studies on the cost of acute healthcare for sepsis and/or meningitis in neonates from low-and middle-income countries (LMICs), with data concentrated mainly in the United States (US) [4] . Furthermore, no studies have reported the costs borne by households, including indirect costs of care, thereby leading to a potential underestimation of the true societal costs [4] . Knowledge of the economic consequences of sepsis and/or meningitis is essential for economic evaluations that inform policy-making to prevent invasive bacterial infections in neonates [5] . The study was conducted both in Mozambique (categorized as a low-income country) and South Africa (categorized as an upper-middle-income country). In 2019, the gross domestic product per capita based on the purchasing power parity was I$1336 in Mozambique and I$13010 in South Africa [6] . This article is part of a series on GBS worldwide. This paper addresses the lack of empirical data in LMICs, and SSA specifically, by estimating the costs to the healthcare system and households during acute episodes of bacterial sepsis and/or meningitis among neonates admitted to hospital in Mozambique and South Africa. This costing study was a linked component of a larger study on the outcomes after invasive GBS disease in young infants, for which the protocol has been published previously [7] . Data were collected among young infants (0-89 days of life) admitted for clinically suspected bacterial sepsis and/or meningitis. In South Africa all cases were confirmed microbiologically either by culture or detection by polymerase chain reaction (for meningitis cases) in a normally sterile site (blood or cerebrospinal fluid). In Mozambique cases were defined based on clinical suspected sepsis and/or meningitis at admission, with only some being microbiologically confirmed. Babies born with severe congenital abnormalities or culture positive results of organisms considered contaminants or skin commensals were excluded [7] . Furthermore, babies born below 32 weeks of gestational age were excluded as they may incur additional costs related to being born prematurely. We enrolled all participants who met the inclusion criteria and who were admitted between 16 April 2020 and 1 April 2021 at the Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital, a tertiaryacademic hospital situated in Soweto, South Africa; and the Manhiça District Hospital, the referral hospital for the district of Manhiça in Mozambique. The hospitals included in this study are public ones; healthcare is normally provided free of charge to all patients in Mozambique and to patients <6 years old in South Africa. Data collection took place during the middle of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 pandemic, which prevented us from reaching the initial set sample size of 20 neonates per site. Most participants were identified prospectively on admission. About 14% (4/29) of the neonates were admitted from birth. These were already in hospital and kept in due to developing sepsis and/or meningitis shortly after birth. Neonates who died shortly after admission were not excluded from the study. Data on hospital resource use were collected from medical records, including information on length of stay, drug use, diagnostic tests, and surgical procedures (Supplementary Materials, Tool 2). Unit costs for resources were provided by the hospitals in each study site, except for the cost per bed-day in Mozambique, which was taken from published literature [8] . To capture the economic impact of an infant's hospitalization on households, a questionnaire was administered to the main caregiver at the time of discharge or soon after discharge, and included questions on out-of-pocket payments; medical, transportation, and accommodation expenses; and caregiving time (Supplementary Materials, Tool 1). Both hospital and household costs only refer to costs incurred during the length of neonatal hospital admission. If an infant died in hospital, no questionnaires were administered but data were still collected from hospital records. The final version of the questionnaire was first piloted before it was administered by trained local research team members. A consent form was signed by all neonates' caregivers participating in the study. We estimated household costs associated with the acute episode including direct and indirect costs, namely medical, transportation, and accommodation costs, as well as costs of informal caregiving. Healthcare provider costs were calculated based on the average length of stay, use of drugs, diagnostics, and supportive care, among others. Most unit costs were provided by the sites in local currencies for the year 2019. Wherever estimates were in another currency (ie, US dollars) and/or for another fiscal year, these were converted into the local currency using the appropriate exchange rate and/or inflated using the local consumer price index [9, 10] . To facilitate comparison between countries, estimates were converted into international dollars (I$) using the purchasing power parity conversion factor for 2019 [11] . Given that cost data are skewed, we report the median and interquartile range (IQR) alongside the mean costs. As a sensitivity analysis, we calculated costs for only microbiologically confirmed Mozambican cases. Data were analyzed in Stata and Excel. The overarching protocol for this multicountry observational study was granted ethical approval at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (approval number 16246). Institutional review boards in each of the operating countries granted ethics approval (Mozambique approval number 98/CNBS/2019; South Africa approval number M190241), as well as the institutional review board of the World Health Organization (approval number ERC0.0003169). Data sharing agreements were jointly developed and signed by all collaborating partners. Data collection instruments used in this study are available in the Supplementary Materials. Overall, 29 neonates (18 from South Africa and 11 from Mozambique) were enrolled in the study population, which is summarized in Most households incurred no direct healthcare expenses related to their child's acute infection. The mean healthcare expenditure per patient was I$40.04 in Mozambique and I$10.03 in South Africa, but median costs were zero in both countries. In both countries, food and accommodation at the hospital are provided to caregivers without charge, so the main direct costs were transportation expenses. On average, households spent I$9.58 in Mozambique and I$41.64 in South Africa on transportation. Therefore, the overall direct household costs were I$49.62 (median, 10 In 97% of cases the caregiver accompanying the child to the hospital was the mother, and otherwise the father. .08]) in South Africa. Such expenses were not considered catastrophic except for 2 households, 1 in each country, for whom these costs represented >40% of their monthly income [12] . Although the cost of informal caregiving could not be calculated for most caregivers as they did not earn an income, all caregivers reported that the extra hours that they spent with their child would not have been spent in paid work. This suggests zero financial opportunity cost for caring for the child, but also may reflect the poor communities from which these children come. The lack of existing literature on this topic prevents any comparison with other studies in SSA. However, based on a few other LMIC studies, the hospitalization costs found in our study appear broadly consistent with previously reported cost of treating sepsis (2017 I$642) and meningitis (2017 I$198-I$8078) [4] . While our study is one of the first to report costs associated with bacterial sepsis and meningitis in SSA, it has some limitations. First, our analysis was only descriptive since the small sample size prevented us from investigating the determinants of costs and differences between countries. Second, we collected data from only 1 hospital in each country, which together with the sample size limits the generalizability of our findings. Third, in Mozambique our results include suspected, as well as microbiologically confirmed cases of sepsis, which may underestimate the true costs. Last, this study does not include the healthcare costs associated with the longer-term impact of the disease such as neurodevelopment deficit. Furthermore, this study does not include preterm infants because it would require a larger sample size and controlling for potential cofounders, which is beyond the scope of this study. Despite these limitations, our multicountry study addresses an important gap in the literature that can inform policymaking. We found substantial costs associated with acute neonatal bacterial sepsis and meningitis in 2 countries in SSA, and our estimates will be useful to inform cost-effectiveness analyses of interventions to prevent invasive bacterial infections in neonates. Supplementary materials are available at Clinical Infectious Diseases online. Consisting of data provided by the authors to benefit the reader, the posted materials are not copyedited and are the sole responsibility of the authors, so questions or comments should be addressed to the corresponding author. Disclaimer. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Newborns: improving survival and well-being Lancet Every Newborn Study Group. Every newborn: progress, priorities, and potential beyond survival Unfinished agenda of the neonates in developing countries: magnitude of neonatal sepsis: systematic review and meta-analysis Systematic review on the acute cost-of-illness of sepsis and meningitis in neonates and infants Lancet Newborn Interventions Review Group; Lancet Every Newborn Study Group. Can available interventions end preventable deaths in mothers, newborn babies, and stillbirths, and at what cost? 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