Community health workers to improve adherence to anti-seizure medication in rural South Africa: Is it cost-effective?
Ryan G WagnerFredrik NorströmMelanie Y BertramStephen M TollmanLars ForsgrenCharles R J C NewtonLars LindholmPublished in: Epilepsia (2020)
CHWs would be cost-effective and the intervention dominated even when costs and effects of the intervention were unfavorably varied. Health system re-engineering currently underway in South Africa identifies CHWs as vital links in primary health care, thereby ensuring sustainability of the intervention. Further research on understanding local health state utility values and cost-effectiveness thresholds could further inform the current model, and undertaking the proposed intervention would provide better estimates of its efficacy on reducing the epilepsy treatment gap in rural South Africa.