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The case for investing in the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases in the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council: an economic evaluation

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posted on 2023-03-09, 12:33 authored by Khalifa ElmusharafKhalifa Elmusharaf, Daniel Grafton, Johanna S Jung, Emily Roberts, Yahya Al-Farsi, Ameera Ali Al Nooh, Buthaina Bin Belaila, Amin ElShamy, Hamoud Al-Zuabi, Kholood Ateeq Al Mutawa, Shadha Alraisi, Najla Al Lawat, Ali Gharbal, Shaker Alomary, Alexey Kulikov, Nasim Pourghazian, Slim Slama, Dudley Tarlton, Nicholas Banatvala

Background While the non-communicable disease (NCD) burden in the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates) has surged over the past decades, the costs and return on investment (ROI) of implementing cost-effective, WHO-recommended NCD interventions have not been established.

Methods We performed an economic analysis to estimate the ROI from scaling up four sets of NCD interventions over 15 years. We estimated the direct costs of the four main NCDs (cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and chronic respiratory diseases) using a prevalence-based,bottom-up cost-of-illness approach. We estimated indirect costs based on productivity loss due to absenteeism, presenteeism and premature deaths. We costed the scaling up of interventions using the WHO Costing Tool and assessed the health impact of interventions using the OneHealth Tool. We calculated ROI by comparing productivity and social benefits with the total costs of implementing the interventions.

Results The four main NCDs cost the GCC economy nearly US$50 billion in 2019, equal to 3.3% of its gross domestic product. The indirect costs are estimated at US$20 billion or 40% of the total burden. Implementing the four modelled intervention packages in the six GCC countries over 15 years will cost US$14 billion, with an ROI of US$4.9 for every US$1 invested and significant health and social benefits, including 290 000 averted premature deaths.

Conclusion Based on the results of these six investment cases, we recommend actions to scale up current WHO-recommended cost-effective interventions, strengthen whole-of-government action, drive the NCD legislative agenda, build out the evidence base, generate additional advocacy material, and increase regional collaboration and data-sharing to establish best practices and monitor impact.

History

Publication

BMJ Global Health 2022;7:e008670

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

Other Funding information

This study received financial support from the Gulf Health Council for the Cooperation Council States

Department or School

  • School of Medicine

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