NEW AIDSPAN PAPER LOOKS AT COST PER NOTIFIED CASE IN HIGH BURDEN TB COUNTRIES
Author:
Brian Mwangi
Article Type:Article Number: 1
ABSTRACT Over the period 2010 ā 2012, the Global Fund appears to have met almost 40% of total expenditure, as reported by the national Tuberculosis programmes in the 17 non BRICS high burden countries. The average total cost per notified case in these countries was $79, of which the Global Fund support averages out at $31 per case per year.
Since its inception, the Global Fund has played an increasingly significant role in providing funding for TB control programs in Fund- eligible countries.Ā By 2012, this contribution made up 80% of all international spending on TB.
The impetus for the paper entitledĀ Expenditure reported by national TB programs in 22 high-burden countries between 2010-2012: what is the Global Fund’s contribution?Ā Ā now available on the Aidspan website was to guide current discussions about the value-for-money in tuberculosis planning and programmingĀ and to provide further data for developing strong investment cases.
National TB programs in the 22 high-burden countries spent $6.37 billion between 2010-2012.Ā For that money 14 million cases were notified by the NTPs to WHO. Ā On average the costs per case notified are relatively modest given the scale of the burden.
For the 17 non-BRICS countries the total cost per notified case ranges from $30 per case in Myanmar to $416 in Thailand, with an average of $86 per case per year. For the BRICS countries, but excluding Russia because it reported more comprehensively on its full expenditure, the average spend per case was $118 per year. Ā In terms of financial support that can be attributed to the Global Fund, the average is $31 per case per year.
Again, for the non-BRIC countries, the Global Fund grants money met between 9% and 76% of the total expenditure for these countries programs, with an average of 40%.
The analysis estimated the proportion of support from the Global Fund per notified case in HBC. Then it went deeper, to calculate whether there were significant cost-per-case differences between countries, and between the BRICS and non-BRICS within the HBCs.
These comparisons are likely to be useful at country level, and this model can be duplicated for regional comparisons.Ā The risk of relying on a single donor is also highlighted.