Cost-Effective Interventions

Interventions are actions taken by or for individuals to reduce the risk, duration, or severity of adverse health conditions. Interventions may be population-based or personal.

DCP2 and GBD present what we know about which health interventions work for a comprehensive range of diseases, injuries, and disabilities in many different contexts. A large share of the disease burden in low- and middle-income countries is attributable to diseases and conditions for which cost-effective interventions are already known and feasible. Selecting the right intervention for a given disease and context matters a great deal. The tools on this page are designed to aid the task.

DCP2 and GBD demonstrate how decision makers could use cost-effectiveness information in combination with information on disease prevalence and avertable illness to determine which interventions should be extended and which ones should be questioned. If developing countries scale up interventions and extend health care services that are cost-effective, the impact on the disease burden could be substantial.

Select Criteria

Disease / Condition Setting Type Objective Target population

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Condition Intervention Intervention type Intervention description Intervention setting Objective Target population Cost effectiveness (US$/DALY) Cost effectiveness estimate (US$) Cost effectiveness range (US$/DALY) Number of DALYs averted (hundreds) Number of deaths averted (hundreds) Quality of cost-effectiveness analysis evidence
Tobacco addiction Nicotine replacement therapy Personal Smoking cessation treatments in the form of nicotine replacement therapy Clinic primary prevention Adults, Women of childbearing age, Adolescents and adults 396 - -- 37.14 452.05 5
Tobacco addiction Nonprice interventions Population Advertising bans on television, radio, and billboards; health information and advertising in the form of health warning labels on tobacco products; interventions to reduce tobacco supply, such as smuggling control; restrictions on smoking Policy level instrument of policy Adults, Women of childbearing age, Pregnant women, Adolescents and adults 353 - -- -- -- 5
Tobacco addiction Taxation causing 33% price increase Population A 33 percent price increase due to tobacco taxes to discourage tobacco use, prevent initiation (and subsequent addiction) among youths, increase the likelihood of cessation among current users, reduce relapse among former users, and reduce consumption amo Policy level instrument of policy Adults, Women of childbearing age, Pregnant women, Adolescents and adults 22 - -- 37.27 1,905.99 5

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