Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2023)

Cost of Acute and Sequelae Care for Japanese Encephalitis Patients, Bangladesh, 2011–2021

  • Rebeca Sultana,
  • Rose Slavkovsky,
  • Md. Redowan Ullah,
  • Zareen Tasnim,
  • Sharmin Sultana,
  • Shifat Khan,
  • Tahmina Shirin,
  • Shamsul Haque,
  • Md. Tanvir Hossen,
  • Md. Monjurul Islam,
  • Jesmin Ara Khanom,
  • Abrarul Haque,
  • Arifa Nazneen,
  • Nadia Ali Rimi,
  • Kamal Hossain,
  • Md. Tanbirul Islam,
  • Shariful Hasan,
  • Md. Shameem Yazdany,
  • Md. Shamim Ahsan,
  • Kamran Mehedi,
  • Anthony A. Marfin,
  • G. William Letson,
  • Clint Pecenka,
  • An Le Thanh Nguyen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2912.230594
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 12
pp. 2488 – 2497

Abstract

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Japanese encephalitis (JE) is associated with an immense social and economic burden. Published cost-of-illness data come primarily from decades-old studies. To determine the cost of care for patients with acute JE and initial and long-term sequelae from the societal perspective, we recruited patients with laboratory-confirmed JE from the past 10 years of JE surveillance in Bangladesh and categorized them as acute care, initial sequalae, and long-term sequelae patients. Among 157 patients, we categorized 55 as acute, 65 as initial sequelae (53 as both categories), and 90 as long-term sequelae. The average (median) societal cost of an acute JE episode was US $929 ($909), of initial sequelae US $75 ($33), and of long-term sequelae US $47 ($14). Most families perceived the effect of JE on their well-being to be extreme and had sustained debt for JE expenses. Our data about the high cost of JE can be used by decision makers in Bangladesh.

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