TY - JOUR
T1 - Does improved risk information increase the value of cholera prevention? An analysis of stated vaccine demand in slum areas of urban Bangladesh
AU - Aziz, Sonia
AU - Pakhtigian, Emily L.
AU - Akanda, Ali S.
AU - Jutla, Antarpreet
AU - Huq, Anwar
AU - Alam, Munirul
AU - Ashan, Gias U.
AU - Colwell, Rita R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by the NASA Applied Sciences Health and Air Quality Program (grant NNX15AF71G). We thank North South University, Bangladesh and Moravian College, U.S.A for providing core and unrestricted support. We acknowledge and appreciate the helpful comments from two anonymous reviewers.
Funding Information:
This study was supported by the NASA Applied Sciences Health and Air Quality Program (grant NNX15AF71G ). We thank North South University, Bangladesh and Moravian College, U.S.A for providing core and unrestricted support. We acknowledge and appreciate the helpful comments from two anonymous reviewers.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/3
Y1 - 2021/3
N2 - As the world's longest running pandemic, cholera poses a substantial public health burden in Bangladesh, where human vulnerability intersects with climatic variability. Barriers to safe water and sanitation place the health of millions of Bangladeshis in jeopardy – especially those who have highly constrained choices in preventing and responding to cholera. In this paper we investigate demand for cholera prevention among residents in the Mirpur and Karail slum areas of urban Dhaka. Using survey data from 2023 households in two slum areas, we analyze responses from a contingent valuation questionnaire that elicited willingness to pay (WTP) for cholera vaccines across household members and under varying disease risk scenarios, finding higher valuation for cholera prevention for children and under scenarios of greater epidemic risk. We estimate the average WTP for a cholera vaccine for a child ranges from TK 134–167 (US$ 1.58–1.96). Consistently, respondents with prior knowledge of the cholera vaccine reported lower WTP valuations, providing suggestive evidence of concerns about vaccine effectiveness and preferences for cholera treatment over prevention. We supplement the contingent valuation analysis with cost of illness estimates from both our household sample as well as from administrative hospital records of over 34,000 cholera patients. We estimate that a household incurs costs of TK 801–922 (US$ 9.43–10.50) per episode of cholera that requires medical treatment. Taken together, these findings indicate higher WTP for cholera treatment compared to prevention, but increased interest in prevention under early warning system scenarios of high disease risk.
AB - As the world's longest running pandemic, cholera poses a substantial public health burden in Bangladesh, where human vulnerability intersects with climatic variability. Barriers to safe water and sanitation place the health of millions of Bangladeshis in jeopardy – especially those who have highly constrained choices in preventing and responding to cholera. In this paper we investigate demand for cholera prevention among residents in the Mirpur and Karail slum areas of urban Dhaka. Using survey data from 2023 households in two slum areas, we analyze responses from a contingent valuation questionnaire that elicited willingness to pay (WTP) for cholera vaccines across household members and under varying disease risk scenarios, finding higher valuation for cholera prevention for children and under scenarios of greater epidemic risk. We estimate the average WTP for a cholera vaccine for a child ranges from TK 134–167 (US$ 1.58–1.96). Consistently, respondents with prior knowledge of the cholera vaccine reported lower WTP valuations, providing suggestive evidence of concerns about vaccine effectiveness and preferences for cholera treatment over prevention. We supplement the contingent valuation analysis with cost of illness estimates from both our household sample as well as from administrative hospital records of over 34,000 cholera patients. We estimate that a household incurs costs of TK 801–922 (US$ 9.43–10.50) per episode of cholera that requires medical treatment. Taken together, these findings indicate higher WTP for cholera treatment compared to prevention, but increased interest in prevention under early warning system scenarios of high disease risk.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113716
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113716
M3 - Article
C2 - 33571944
AN - SCOPUS:85100587500
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 272
JO - Social Science and Medicine
JF - Social Science and Medicine
M1 - 113716
ER -