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Featured researches published by Gary M. Ginsberg.


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2013

Should Israel screen all mothers-to-be to prevent early-onset of neonatal group B streptococcal disease? A cost-utility analysis

Gary M. Ginsberg; Arthur I. Eidelman; Eric Shinwell; Emilia Anis; Reuven Peyser; Yoram Lotan

BackgroundIn Israel, an average of 37 children are born each year with sepsis and another four with meningitis as a result of Group B Streptococcal (GBS) disease. Israel currently only screens mothers with defined risk factors (around 15% of all pregnancies) in order to identify candidates for Intrapartum Antiobiotic Prophyhlaxis (IAP) of GBS. This paper presents a cost-utility analysis of implementing an alternative strategy, which would expand the current protocol to one aiming to screen all pregnant women at 35–37 weeks gestation based on taking a vaginal culture for GBS.MethodsA spreadsheet model was built incorporating technical, epidemiological, health service costs, demographic and economic data based primarily on Israeli sources.ResultsThe intervention of universal screening (compared with the current scenario) would increase screening costs from 580,000 NIS to 3,278,000 million NIS. In addition, the intervention would also increase penicillin costs from 39,000 NIS to 221,000 NIS. Current culture screening of approximately 15% of mothers-to-be with high risk factors resulted in 42 GBS births in 2008-9 (0.253/1000 births). Expanding culture screening to 85% of mothers-to-be, will decrease the number of GBS births to 17.3 (0.104/1000 births). The initial 2.9 million NIS incremental intervention costs are offset by decreased treatment costs of 1.9 million NIS and work productivity gains of 811,000 NIS as a result of a decrease in neurological sequelae from GBS caused meningitis. Thus the resultant net cost of the intervention is only around 134,000 NIS. Culture based screening will reduce the burden of disease by 12.6 discounted Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYS), giving a very cost effective baseline incremental cost per QALY (cf. risk factor screening) of 10,641 NIS per QALY. The data was very sensitive to rates of anaphylactic shock and changes in the percentage of meningitis cases that had associated long term-sequelae.ConclusionIt is recommended that Israel adopt universal culture-based GBS screening.


Resuscitation | 2015

Cost-utility analysis of treating out of hospital cardiac arrests in Jerusalem.

Gary M. Ginsberg; Jeremy D. Kark; Sharon Einav

BACKGROUND Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) initiates a chain of responses including emergency medical service mobilization and medical treatment, transfer and admission first to a hospital Emergency Department (ED) and then usually to an intensive care unit and ward. Costly pre- and in-hospital care may be followed by prolonged post discharge expenditure on treatment of patients with severe neurological sequelae. We assessed the cost-effectiveness of treatment of OHCA by calculating the cost per Disability Adjusted Life Year (DALY) averted. METHODS AND RESULTS We studied 3355 consecutive non-traumatic OHCAs (2005-2010) in Jerusalem, Israel, supplemented by hospital utilization data extracted from patient files (n = 570) and post-discharge follow-up (n = 196). Demographic, utilization and economic data were incorporated into a spreadsheet model to calculate the cost-utility ratio. Advanced life support was administered to 2264 of the 3355 OHCAs (67.5%) and 1048 (45.6%) patients were transferred to the ED. Of 676 (20.1%) patients who survived the ED and were admitted, there were 206 (6.1%) survivors to discharge, among them only 113 (3.4%) neurologically intact. Total cost (


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2014

Reducing the cesarean delivery rates for breech presentations: administration of spinal anesthesia facilitates manipulation to cephalic presentation, but is it cost saving?

Carolyn F. Weiniger; Paul S Spencer; Yuval Weiss; Gary M. Ginsberg; Yossef Ezra

39,100,000) per DALY averted (1353) was


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2012

Economic effects of interventions to reduce obesity in Israel

Gary M. Ginsberg; Elliot Rosenberg

28,864. CONCLUSIONS The current package of OHCA interventions in Jerusalem appears to be very cost-effective as the cost per averted DALY of


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2016

Erratum to: The burden of smoking in Israel-attributable mortality and costs (2014).

Gary M. Ginsberg; Haim Geva

28,864 is less than the Gross Domestic Product per capita (


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2014

The burden of smoking in Israel–attributable mortality and costs (2014)

Gary M. Ginsberg; Haim Geva

33,261). This paper provides a basis for studying the effects of potential interventions that can be evaluated in terms of their incremental costs per averted DALY for treatment of OHCA.


European Journal of Public Health | 2010

Issues in estimating smoking attributable mortality in Israel

Gary M. Ginsberg; Elliot Rosenberg; Laura Rosen

BackgroundExternal cephalic version (ECV) is infrequently performed and 98% of breech presenting fetuses are delivered surgically. Neuraxial analgesia can increase the success rate of ECV significantly, potentially reducing cesarean delivery rates for breech presentation. The current study aims to determine whether the additional cost to the hospital of spinal anesthesia for ECV is offset by cost savings generated by reduced cesarean delivery.MethodsIn our tertiary hospital, three variables manpower, disposables, and fixed costs were calculated for ECV, ECV plus anesthetic doses of spinal block, vaginal delivery and cesarean delivery. Total procedure costs were compared for possible delivery pathways. Manpower data were obtained from management payroll, fixed costs by calculating cost/lifetime usage rate and disposables were micro-costed in 2008, expressed in 2013 NIS.ResultsCesarean delivery is the most expensive option, 11670.54 NIS and vaginal delivery following successful ECV under spinal block costs 5497.2 NIS. ECV alone costs 960.21 NIS, ECV plus spinal anesthesia costs 1386.97 NIS. The highest individual cost items for vaginal, cesarean delivery and ECV were for manpower. Expensive fixed costs for cesarean delivery included operating room trays and postnatal hospitalization (minimum 3 days). ECV with spinal block is cheaper due to lower expected cesarean delivery rate and its lower associated costs.ConclusionsThe additional cost of the spinal anesthesia is offset by increased success rates for the ECV procedure resulting in reduction in the cesarean delivery rate.


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2016

Mortality, hospital days and expenditures attributable to ambient air pollution from particulate matter in Israel.

Gary M. Ginsberg; Ehud Kaliner; Itamar Grotto

BackgroundObesity is a major risk factor for many diseases. The paper calculates the economic impact and the cost per Quality-Adjusted Life Year (QALY) resulting from the adoption of eight interventions comprising the clinical and part of the community components of the National Prevention and Health Promotion Program (NPHPP) of the Israeli Ministry of Health (MOH) which represents the obesity control implementation arm of the MOH Healthy Israel 2020 Initiative.MethodsHealth care costs per person were calculated by body mass index (BMI) by applying Israeli cost data to aggregated results from international studies. These were applied to BMI changes from eight intervention programmes in order to calculate reductions in direct treatment costs. Indirect cost savings were also estimated as were additional costs due to increased longevity of program participants. Data on costs and QALYs gained from Israeli and International dietary interventions were combined to provide cost-utility estimates of an intervention program to reduce obesity in Israel over a range of recidivism rates.ResultsOn average, persons who were overweight (25 ≤ BMI < 30)had health care costs that were 12.2% above the average health care costs of persons with normal or sub-normal weight to height ratios (BMI < 25). This differential in costs rose to 31.4% and 73.0% for obese and severely obese persons, respectively.For overweight (25 ≤ BMI < 30) and obese persons (30 ≤ BMI < 40), costs per person for the interventions (including the screening overhead) ranged from 35 NIS for a community intervention to 860 NIS, reflecting the intensity of the clinical setting intervention and the unit costs of the professionals carrying out the intervention [e.g., dietician]. Expected average BMI decreases ranged from 0.05 to 0.90. Higher intervention costs and larger BMI decreases characterized the two clinical lifestyle interventions for the severely obese (BMI ≥ 40).A program directed at the entire Israeli population aged 20 and over, using a variety of eight different interventions would cost 2.07 billion NIS overall. In the baseline scenario (with an assumed recidivism rate of 50% per annum), approximately 620,000,000 NIS would be recouped in the form of decreased treatment costs and indirect costs, increased productivity and decreased absenteeism. After discounting the 89,000,000 NIS additional health costs attributable to these extra life years, it is estimated that the total net costs to society would be 1.55 billion NIS. This total net cost was relatively stable to increases in the programs recidivism rates, but highly sensitive to reductions in recidivism rates.Under baseline assumptions, implementation of the cluster of interventions would save 32,671 discounted QALYs at a cost of only 47,559 NIS per QALY, less than half of the Israeli per capita GNP (104,000 NIS). Thus implementation of these components of the NPHPP should be considered very cost-effective.ConclusionDespite the large costs of such a large national program to control obesity, cost-utility analysis strongly supports its introduction.


Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | 2017

Mortality, hospital days and treatment costs of current and reduced sugar consumption in Israel.

Gary M. Ginsberg

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1186/2045-4015-3-28.].


Journal of Public Health Policy | 2018

Did two booster doses for schoolchildren change the epidemiology of pertussis in Israel

Emilia Anis; Larisa Moerman; Gary M. Ginsberg; Isabella Karakis; Paul E. Slater; Bruce Warshavsky; Ruslan Gosinov; Itamar Grotto; Esther Marva

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Emilia Anis

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Itamar Grotto

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Haim Geva

United States Public Health Service

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Arthur I. Eidelman

Shaare Zedek Medical Center

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Carolyn F. Weiniger

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Ehud Kaliner

Israel Ministry of Health

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Esther Marva

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Isabella Karakis

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Jeremy D. Kark

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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