Helen Owen
University of London
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Health Policy and Planning | 2017
Giulia Greco; Emmanuelle Daviaud; Helen Owen; Reuben Ligowe; Emmanuel Chimbalanga; Tanya Guenther; Nathalie Gamache; Evelyn Zimba; Joy E Lawn
Malawi is one of few low-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa to have met the fourth Millennium Development Goal for child survival (MDG 4). To accelerate progress towards MDGs, the Malawi Ministry of Healths Reproductive Health Unit - in partnership with Save the Children, UNICEF and others - implemented a Community Based Maternal and Newborn Care (CBMNC) package, integrated within the existing community-based system. Multi-purpose Health Surveillance Assistants (HSAs) already employed by the local government were trained to conduct five core home visits. The additional financial costs, including donated items, incurred by the CBMNC package were analysed from the perspective of the provider. The coverage level of HSA home visits (35%) was lower than expected: mothers received an average of 2.8 visits rather than the programme target of five, or the more reasonable target of four given the number of women who would go away from the programme area to deliver. Two were home pregnancy and less than one, postnatal, reflecting greater challenges for the tight time window to achieve postnatal home visits. As a proportion of a 40 hour working week, CBMNC related activities represented an average of 13% of the HSA work week. Modelling for 95% coverage in a population of 100,000, the same number of HSAs could achieve this high coverage and financial programme cost could remain the same. The cost per mother visited would be US
Health Policy and Planning | 2017
Bereket Mathewos; Helen Owen; Deborah Sitrin; Simon Cousens; Tedbabe Degefie; Stephen Wall; Abeba Bekele; Joy E Lawn; Emmanuelle Daviaud
6.6, or US
Health Policy and Planning | 2017
Emmanuelle Daviaud; Lungiswa Nkonki; Petrida Ijumba; Tanya Doherty; Joy E Lawn; Helen Owen; Debra Jackson; Mark Tomlinson
1.6 per home visit. The financial cost of universal coverage in Malawi would stand at 1.3% of public health expenditure if the programme is rolled out across the country. Higher coverage would increase efficiency of financial investment as well as achieve greater effectiveness.
Health Policy and Planning | 2016
Fatuma Manzi; Emmanuelle Daviaud; Joanna Schellenberg; Joy E Lawn; Theopista John; Georgina Msemo; Helen Owen; Diana Barger; Claudia Hanson; Josephine Borghi
About 87 000 neonates die annually in Ethiopia, with slower progress than for child deaths and 85% of births are at home. As part of a multi-country, standardized economic evaluation, we examine the incremental benefit and costs of providing management of possible serious bacterial infection (PSBI) for newborns at health posts in Ethiopia by Health Extension Workers (HEWs), linked to improved implementation of existing policy for community-based newborn care (Health Extension Programme). The government, with Save the Children/Saving Newborn Lives and John Snow, Inc., undertook a cluster randomized trial. Both trial arms involved improved implementation of the Health Extension Programme. The intervention arm received additional equipment, support and supervision for HEWs to identify and treat PSBI. In 2012, ∼95% of mothers in the study area received at least one pregnancy or postnatal visit in each arm, an average of 5.2 contacts per mother in the intervention arm (4.9 in control). Of all visits, 79% were conducted by volunteer community health workers. HEWs spent around 9% of their time on the programme. The financial cost per mother and newborn was
Health Education Journal | 2018
Marcy McCall; Elizabeth A Spencer; Helen Owen; Nia Roberts; Carl Heneghan
34 (in 2015 USD) in the intervention arm (
BMC Public Health | 2016
Corrina Moucheraud; Helen Owen; Neha S. Singh; Courtney Ng; Jennifer Requejo; Joy E Lawn; Peter Berman
27 in control), economic costs of
Health Policy and Planning | 2017
Emmanuelle Daviaud; Helen Owen; Catherine Pitt; Kate Kerber; Fiorella Bianchi Jassir; Diana Barger; Fatuma Manzi; Elizabeth Ekipara-Kiracho; Giulia Greco; Peter Waiswa; Joy E Lawn
37 and
Health Policy and Planning | 2017
Diana Barger; Bertha Pooley; Julien Roger Dupuy; Norma Amparo Cardenas; Steve Wall; Helen Owen; Emmanuelle Daviaud
30, respectively. Adding PSBI management at community level was estimated to reduce neonatal mortality after day 1 by 17%, translating to a cost per DALY averted of
BMC Public Health | 2016
Peter Berman; Jennifer Requejo; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Neha S. Singh; Helen Owen; Joy E Lawn
223 or 47% of the GDP per capita, a highly cost-effective intervention by WHO thresholds. In a routine situation, the intervention programme cost would represent 0.3% of public health expenditure per capita and 0.5% with additional monthly supervision meetings. A platform wide approach to improved supervision including a dedicated transport budget may be more sustainable than a programme-specific approach. In this context, strengthening the existing HEW package is cost-effective and also avoids costly transfers to health centres/hospitals.
Health Policy and Planning | 2017
Elizabeth Ekirapa-Kiracho; Diana Barger; Chripus Mayora; Peter Waiswa; Joy E Lawn; James Kalungi; Gertrude Namazzi; Kate Kerber; Helen Owen; Emmanuelle Daviaud
In light of South Africas generalized HIV/AIDS epidemic coupled with high infant mortality, we undertook a cluster Randomized Control Trial (2008-10) assessing the effect of Community Health Worker (CHW) antenatal and postnatal home visits on, amongst other indicators, levels of HIV-free survival, and exclusive and appropriate infant feeding at 12 weeks. Cost and time implications were calculated, by assessing the 15 participating CHWs, using financial records, mHealth and interviews. Sustainability and scalability were assessed, enabling identification of health system issues. The majority (96%) of women in the community received an average of 4.1 visits (target seven). The paid, single purpose CHWs spent 13 h/week on the programme. The financial cost per mother amounted to