Abstract

BackgroundAs the global strategies to fight the SARS-COV-2 infection (COVID-19) evolved, response strategies impacted the magnitude and distribution of health-related expenditures. Although the economic consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic has been dire, and its true scale is yet to be ascertained, one key component of the response is the management of infected persons which its cost has not been adequately examined, especially in Africa.MethodsTo fill gaps in context-specific cost of treating COVID-19 patients, we adopted a health system’s perspective and a bottom-up, point of care resource use data collection approach to estimate the cost of clinical management of COVID-19 infection in Ghana. The analysis was based on the national protocol for management of COVID-19 patients at the time, whether in public or private settings. No patients were enrolled into the study as it was entirely a protocol-based cost of illness analysis.ResultWe found that resource use and average cost of treatment per COVID-19 case varied significantly by disease severity level and treatment setting. The average cost of treating COVID-19 patient in Ghana was estimated to be US$11,925 (GH¢68,929) from the perspective of the health system; ranging from US$282 (GH¢1629) for patients with mild/asymptomatic disease condition managed at home to about US$23,382 (GH¢135,149) for critically ill patients requiring sophisticated and specialised care in hospitals. The cost of treatment increased by some 20 folds once a patient moved from home management to the treatment centre. Overheard costs accounted for 63–71% of institutionalised care compared to only 6% for home-based care. The main cost drivers in overhead category in the institutionalised care were personal protective equipment (PPEs) and transportation, whilst investigations (COVID-19 testing) and staff time for follow-up were the main cost drivers for home-based care.ConclusionCost savings could be made by early detection and effective treatment of COVID-19 cases, preferably at home, before any chance of deterioration to the next worst form of the disease state, thereby freeing up more resources for other aspects of the fight against the pandemic. Policy makers in Ghana should thus make it a top priority to intensify the early detection and case management of COVID-19 infections.

Highlights

  • As the global strategies to fight the SARS-COV-2 infection (COVID-19) evolved, response strategies impacted the magnitude and distribution of health-related expenditures

  • Cost savings could be made by early detection and effective treatment of COVID-19 cases, preferably at home, before any chance of deterioration to the worst form of the disease state, thereby freeing up more resources for other aspects of the fight against the pandemic

  • Our analysis estimates that the average cost of treating a person infected with SARS-COV-2 in Ghana was about US$11,925 (GH¢68,929), which ranged widely from US$282 (GH¢1629) for mild cases managed in home settings to US$23,382 (GH¢135,149) for critically ill patients managed in resource intensive and specialised hospital settings

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Summary

Introduction

As the global strategies to fight the SARS-COV-2 infection (COVID-19) evolved, response strategies impacted the magnitude and distribution of health-related expenditures. In December 2019, an unknown respiratory illness was reported in the Hubei Province of China, a disease later named COVID-19 and caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus type-2 (SARS-COV-2) [1]. The disease subsequently spread globally and was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) in March 2020 [2]. The global response measures at the time was not uniform across countries but notably centred on centred on travel restrictions, evolving into partial and complete lockdowns to drastically limit physical interactions with the intent of curbing the spread of the virus alongside aggressive testing and treatment of infected persons [5]. The World Health Organisation issued varied guidelines (updated from time to time) and countries adapted it to their local context

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