Search results for "WHO target"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Absolute targets for HCV elimination and national health policy paradigms: Foreseeing future requirements

2021

The World Health Organization (WHO) targets for eliminating HCV by 2030 may be overambitious for many high-income countries. Recent analyses (ie, data from 2017 to 2019) show that only 11 countries are on track for meeting WHO’s elimination targets. For a country to be truly on track, it is important that the majority of infected individuals be identified and treated. There is still a need for country and population-specific evaluations within the different HCV screening and treatment strategies available, in order to assess their cost-effectiveness and sustainability and support an evidence-based policy for HCV elimination. Any health policy model is affected by the diversity and quality o…

media_common.quotation_subjectWorld Health Organizationdisease burden03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOrder (exchange)PandemicHumansQuality (business)Disease EradicationSet (psychology)Disease burdenHealth policymedia_commonPublic economicsHepatologyHCV screeningHealth PolicymicroeliminationCOVID-19Hepatitis CWHO targetHCV elimination030220 oncology & carcinogenesisSustainability030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyBusinessHumanDiversity (politics)Liver International
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Optimization of hepatitis C virus screening strategies by birth cohort in Italy

2020

Abstract Background and Aims Cost‐effective screening strategies are needed to make hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination a reality. We determined if birth cohort screening is cost‐effective in Italy. Methods A model was developed to quantify screening and healthcare costs associated with HCV. The model‐estimated prevalence of undiagnosed HCV was used to calculate the antibody screens needed annually, with a €25 000 cost‐effectiveness threshold. Outcomes were assessed under the status quo and a scenario that met the World Health Organization's targets for elimination of HCV. The elimination scenario was assessed under five screening strategies. Results A graduated birth cohort screening strat…

medicine.medical_specialtyCost effectivenessCost-Benefit AnalysisHepatitis C virusSettore SECS-P/06cost-effectiveneHepacivirusmedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsWorld healthNO03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineHumansMass Screeningcost-effectivenessAntibody screensHepatologyUnder-fivebusiness.industryscreeningHealth services researchhealthcost‐effectivenessHepatitis C ChronicHepatologyHepatitis CItaly030220 oncology & carcinogenesisSettore MED/42HCVOriginal Articleepidemiology030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyLiver Disease and Public HealthQuality-Adjusted Life YearsBirth cohortbusinessWHO targetscost-effectiveness HCV screening WHO targetsDemography
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Optimizing diagnostic algorithms to advance Hepatitis C elimination in Italy: A cost effectiveness evaluation

2021

Objectives: Optimized diagnostic algorithms to detect active infections are crucial to achieving HCV elimination. We evaluated the cost effectiveness and sustainability of different algorithms for HCV active infection diagnosis, in a context of a high endemic country for HCV infection. Methods: A Markov disease progression model, simulating six diagnostic algorithms in the birth cohort 1969‐1989 over a 10‐year horizon from a healthcare perspective was used. Conventionally diagnosis of active HCV infection is through detection of antibodies (HCV‐Ab) detection followed by HCV‐RNA or HCV core antigen (HCV‐Ag) confirmatory testing either on a second sample or by same sample reflex testing. The …

Pediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyCost effectivenessCost-Benefit Analysiscost-effectiveneContext (language use)HepacivirusAntiviral AgentsLiver diseaseMedicineHumansbusinesshealth care economics and organizationsHepatologybusiness.industryscreeningDisease progressionHCV chronic infectionvirus diseasesDiagnostic algorithmshealthHepatitis CHepatitis C Chronicmedicine.diseaseHepatitis CHcv eliminationdigestive system diseasesWHO targetHcv core antigenbusinessAlgorithms
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