Abstract

BackgroundWith the aim to support planning of essential child care in the 13th Five-year Plan Period (2016–20), a number of core child survival interventions were identified and analysed in terms of cost-effectiveness with participation of UNICEF experts and the Chinese health decision-makers. MethodsAfter systematic comparison of the China Child Survival Strategy (CSS) interventions and the Global Catalogue of Key Interventions Related to Reproductive Maternal and Child Health by WHO, the research team identified 24 evidenced high-impact child survival interventions that are feasible for implementation in China after several rounds of expert consultation. The intervention package module was established with the aid of “OneHealth Tool” (OHT), a health planning tool developed by the WHO and other international organizations, to perform cost estimation and cost-effectiveness analysis of 24 interventions. Direct programme cost was calculated, including drug, consumable, and medical tests. A measure of maternal and child deaths averted was used as the effectiveness indicator. Cost per life saved was calculated for each intervention. The national and provincial level (Guangdong, Guizhou, and Qinghai) parameters were collected. FindingsImplementation of 24 interventions is estimated to reduce maternal mortality from 21·7 deaths per 100 000 livebirths at 2015 to 13·67 deaths per 100 000 livebirths at 2020, infant mortality from 8·90 deaths per 1000 livebirths at 2015 to 6·21 deaths per 1000 livebirths at 2020, and under-5 mortality from 11·7 deaths per 1000 livebirths at 2015 to 8·26 deaths per 1000 livebirths at 2020 by 2020. The deaths of 79 000 neonates and 126 000 children younger than 5 years could be averted, with 123·92 billion Yuan total investment by the end of 2020. Based on cost-effectiveness, we rearranged the 24 interventions in three subgroups: package I (top six effective and cost-effective interventions, including C-section on indication, newborn resuscitation, newborn sepsis management, pneumonia management with antibiotics, exclusive breastfeeding, Kangaroo Mother Care), package II (package I with addition of four cost-effective interventions (Neonatal sepsis (antibiotic injections), prevention and treatment of abortion complications, prevention and management of postpartum haemorrhage, and breastfeeding and complementary feeding for infants between 6 months and 2 years) and package III (package II with addition of four effective interventions (including pneumococcal vaccine, HIB vaccine, diarrhoea management (oral rehydration salts), multi-micronutrients (folic acid, ferrum and calcium) supplementation for pregnant woman). Package I could avert 70% of total deaths at a very low cost (0·6% of the total cost of 24 interventions). Based on population size and the baseline coverage, the estimation results show some differences in cost-effectiveness between the three provinces. InterpretationChina could save more lives of women and children at low costs through implementing effective interventions. We recommend including these 24 interventions in the essential package for children in China in a stepwise way. FundingThe Hongkong Committee.

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