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Cost-Effectiveness of a School-and Family-Based Childhood Obesity Prevention Programme in China: The “CHIRPY DRAGON” Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial

Mandana Zanganeh, Peymané Adab, Li Bai, Miranda Pallan, Wei Jia Liu, Karla Hemming, Rong Lin, Wei Liu, James Martín, Kar Keung Cheng, Emma Frew

2021International Journal of Public Health19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives: Rapid socioeconomic and nutrition transitions in Chinese populations have contributed to the growth in childhood obesity. This study presents a cost-effectiveness analysis of a school- and family-based childhood obesity prevention programme in China. Methods: A trial-based economic evaluation assessed cost-effectiveness at 12 months. Forty schools with 1,641 children were randomised to either receive the multi-component (diet and physical activity) intervention or to continue with usual activities. Both public sector and societal perspectives were adopted. Costs and benefits in the form of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were compared and uncertainty was assessed using established UK and US thresholds. Results: The intervention cost was 35.53 Yuan (£7.04/US$10.01) per child from a public sector perspective and 536.95 Yuan (£106/US$151) from a societal perspective. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was 272.7 Yuan (£54/US$77)/BMI z-score change. The ICER was 8,888 Yuan (£1,760/US$2,502) and 73,831 Yuan (£14,620/US$20,796) per QALY from a public sector and societal perspective, respectively and was cost-effective using UK (£20,000) and US (US$50,000) per QALY thresholds. Conclusion: A multi-component school-based prevention programme is a cost-effective means of preventing childhood obesity in China.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineChildhood obesityCost effectivenessSocioeconomic statusPublic healthObesityCluster randomised controlled trialChinaEnvironmental healthCluster (spacecraft)Cost–benefit analysisCost-effectiveness analysisQuality-adjusted life yearIntervention (counseling)DemographyGerontologyPopulationGeographyNursingOverweightPolitical scienceArchaeologySociologyRisk analysis (engineering)Internal medicineProgramming languageLawComputer scienceObesity, Physical Activity, DietChild Nutrition and Water AccessHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life