Optimising TB investments in Belarus, Moldova, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan: An allocative efficiency analysis
Anna L. Bowring, Rowan Martin-Hughes, Debra ten Brink, Kelvin Burke, Svitlana Nidzvetska, Nisaa Wulan, Phillip Luong, Eloisa Perez-Bennetts, Nick Scott

TL;DR
This study identifies cost-effective ways to reduce tuberculosis in five countries by optimizing current spending on prevention, screening, and treatment.
Contribution
The study provides country-specific recommendations for reallocating TB funds to maximize health outcomes using the Optima TB model.
Findings
Optimizing spending could reduce TB incidence and deaths by 1–18% in 2024–2030.
Shorter treatment regimens and community-based case finding are more cost-effective than mass screening.
Increasing spending by 150% in three countries had minimal additional impact on TB reduction.
Abstract
High rates of drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) are a barrier to achieving End TB-strategy targets in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. This analysis collates results from five country-level modelling studies to identify priorities to reduce TB burden. Allocative efficiency studies were conducted in 2023 in Belarus, Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan using the Optima TB model to determine the optimised distribution of funds to maximise health outcomes with given resources. A baseline scenario of continued 2022 spending was compared to scenarios with spending optimised across prevention, screening and treatment interventions to reduce TB incidence and deaths over 2024–2030. Modelled pulmonary TB incidence ranged from 25-119 per 100,000 population, and 14 − 43% of new/relapse TB cases were drug resistant. In all countries, optimizing current spending involved: expanding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Child Nutrition and Water Access
