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Bulletin of the World Health Organization logoLink to Bulletin of the World Health Organization
. 2003 May 16;81(4):269–276.

Cost-effectiveness of social marketing of insecticide-treated nets for malaria control in the United Republic of Tanzania.

Kara Hanson 1, Nassor Kikumbih 1, Joanna Armstrong Schellenberg 1, Haji Mponda 1, Rose Nathan 1, Sally Lake 1, Anne Mills 1, Marcel Tanner 1, Christian Lengeler 1
PMCID: PMC2572445  PMID: 12764493

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the costs and consequences of a social marketing approach to malaria control in children by means of insecticide-treated nets in two rural districts of the United Republic of Tanzania, compared with no net use. METHODS: Project cost data were collected prospectively from accounting records. Community effectiveness was estimated on the basis of a nested case-control study and a cross-sectional cluster sample survey. FINDINGS: The social marketing approach to the distribution of insecticide-treated nets was estimated to cost 1560 US dollars per death averted and 57 US dollars per disability-adjusted life year averted. These figures fell to 1018 US dollars and 37 US dollars, respectively, when the costs and consequences of untreated nets were taken into account. CONCLUSION: The social marketing of insecticide-treated nets is an attractive intervention for preventing childhood deaths from malaria.

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