Cost of Dengue Illness in Indonesia across Hospital, Ambulatory, and not Medically Attended Settings

Wilastonegoro, Nandyan N. and Kharisma, Dinar D. and Laksono, Ida S. and Halasa-Rappel, Yara A. and Brady, Oliver J. and Shepard, Donald S. (2020) Cost of Dengue Illness in Indonesia across Hospital, Ambulatory, and not Medically Attended Settings. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 103 (5). pp. 2029-2039. ISSN 0002-9637

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Abstract

Informed decisions concerning emerging technologies against dengue require knowledge about the disease’s economic cost and each stakeholder’s potential benefits from better control. To generate such data for Indonesia, we reviewed recent literature, analyzed expenditure and utilization data from two hospitals and two primary care facilities in Yogyakarta city, and interviewed 67 dengue patients from hospital, ambulatory, and not medically attended settings. We derived the cost of a dengue episode by outcome, setting, and the breakdown by payer. We then calculated aggregate Yogyakarta and national costs and 95% uncertainty intervals (95% UIs). Dengue costs per nonfatal case in hospital, ambulatory, not medically attended, and overall average settings were US$316.24 (95% UI: $242.30–$390.18), US$22.45 (95% UI: $14.12–$30.77), US$7.48 (95% UI: $2.36–$12.60), and US$50.41 (95% UI: $35.75–$65.07), respectively. Costs of nonfatal episodes were borne by the patient’s household (37%), social contributors (relatives and friends, 20%), national health insurance (25%), and other sources (government, charity, and private insurance, 18%). After including fatal cases, the average cost per episode became $90.41 (95% UI: $72.79–$112.35). Indonesia had an estimated 7.535 (95% UI: 1.319–16.513) million dengue episodes in 2017, giving national aggregate costs of $681.26 (95% UI: $232.28–$2,371.56) million. Unlike most previous research that examined only the formal medical sector, this study included the estimated 63% of national dengue episodes that were not medically attended. Also, this study used actual costs, rather than charges, which generally understate dengue’s economic burden in public facilities. Overall, this study found that Indonesia’s aggregate cost of dengue was 73% higher than previously estimated, strengthening the need for effective control.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Library Dosen
Subjects: R Medicine > RP Public Health and Nutrition
R Medicine > RT Nursing
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing > Nursing
Depositing User: Sri JUNANDI
Date Deposited: 11 Aug 2025 01:44
Last Modified: 11 Aug 2025 01:44
URI: https://ir.lib.ugm.ac.id/id/eprint/17983

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