Economic burden of Chagas disease in Brazil: a nationwide cost-of-illness study
Mônica Viegas Andrade, Kenya Valeria Micaela de Souza Noronha, Aline de Souza, Nayara Abreu Julião, André Soares Motta-Santos, Paulo Estevão Franco Braga, Henrique Bracarense, Yasmim Caroline Silva, Bruno Ramos Nascimento, Mariângela Carneiro, Francisco Rogerlândio Martins-Melo

TL;DR
This study estimates the economic burden of chronic Chagas disease in Brazil, finding it costs over $11 billion annually and highlights the need for better public health policies.
Contribution
The study provides the first nationwide cost-of-illness analysis of chronic Chagas disease in Brazil, including both direct and indirect costs.
Findings
The annual economic burden of chronic Chagas disease in Brazil is estimated at $11.44 billion.
Direct medical costs account for 72% of the total lifetime economic burden per patient.
Annual direct medical costs represent 11% of Brazil's Ministry of Health budget.
Abstract
Chagas disease remains a public health issue with substantial financial impact on the healthcare system of Latin American countries. Despite its great economic burden, research quantifying the direct and indirect costs are limited, particularly within Brazil. This study estimates the economic burden of chronic Chagas disease in Brazil, as part of the broader project, ‘The Burden of Chagas Disease in the Contemporary World: The RAISE Study’. A Markov model was used to estimate the economic burden of chronic Chagas disease from a societal perspective considering six mutually exclusive health states: four clinical forms (indeterminate, cardiac, digestive, mixed) and two absorptive states (death and cure). This model was analyzed through microsimulation with a one-year cycle length, considering a hypothetical cohort of 10,000 patients, each repeated 1000 times to report the average. Data…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTrypanosoma species research and implications · Research on Leishmaniasis Studies
