Costs of an Alcohol Measurement Intervention in Three Latin American Countries

  • Adriana Solovei
  • Jakob Manthey
  • Peter Anderson
  • Liesbeth Mercken
  • Eva Jané Llopis
  • Guillermina Natera Rey
  • Augusto Pérez Gómez
  • Juliana Mejía Trujillo
  • Inés Bustamante
  • Marina Piazza
  • Alejandra Pérez de León
  • Miriam Arroyo
  • Hein de Vries
  • Jürgen Rehm
  • Silvia Evers

Abstract

Alcohol measurement in health care settings is an effective intervention for reducing alcohol-related harm. However, in many countries, costs related to alcohol measurement have not yet been transparently assessed, which may hinder its adoption and implementation. Costs of an alcohol measurement programme in three upper-middle-income Latin American countries were assessed via questionnaires and compared, as part of the quasi-experimental SCALA study. Additional to the intervention costs, the costs of three implementation strategies: standard training and clinical package, intensive training and clinical package, and community support, were assessed and subsequently translated into costs per additional alcohol measurement session. Results demonstrated that costs for one alcohol measurement session ranged between Int$ 0.67 and Int$ 1.23 in Colombia, Int$ 1.19 and Int$ 2.57 in Mexico, and Int$ 1.11 and Int$ 2.14 in Peru. Costs were mainly driven by the salaries of the health professionals. Implementation strategies costs per additional alcohol measurement session ranged between Int$ 1.24 and Int$ 6.17. In all three countries, standard training and a clinical package may be a promising implementation strategy with a relatively low cost per additional alcohol measurement session.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer700
ISSN1660-4601
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 08.01.2022
PubMed 35055522