Cost-effectiveness of interventions for reducing road traffic injuries related to driving under the influence of alcohol.

Author(s)
Ditsuwan, V. Lennert Veerman, J. Bertram, M. & Vos, T.
Year
Abstract

The objective of this study was to determine the cost-effectiveness of interventions to reduce road traffic injuries caused by driving under the influence of alcohol in Thailand. A generalized cost-effectiveness analysis was used and included costs from a health sector perspective. The model considered road traffic crash victims who were injured, disabled, or died. Proportions were obtained of alcohol-related crashes from the Thai Injury Surveillance system. Intervention effectiveness was derived from published reviews and a study in one province of Thailand. Random breath testing, selective breath testing, and mass media campaigns, both current and intervention scenarios, were compared with a "do-nothing" scenario. Intervention costs were calculated and cost offsets of prevented treatment costs in 2004 Thai baht (US $1 = 41 baht) and measured benefits in terms of disability-adjusted life-years averted. Interventions with incremental cost-effectiveness ratios below 110,000 Thai baht (1×gross domestic product per capita) per disability-adjusted life-year (US $2,680) were considered very cost-effective. Compared with doing nothing, mass media campaigns, random breath testing, and selective breath testing are all cost saving. When averted treatment costs are ignored and only intervention costs are included, all three interventions are very cost-effective, with incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of 10,300, 14,300 and 13,000 baht/disability-adjusted life-year, respectively. The current mix of mass media campaigns and sobriety checkpoints is therefore also cost-effective, but underinvestment in checkpoints limits its overall effect. A greater intensity of conducting sobriety checkpoints in Thailand is recommended to complement the investment in mass media campaigns. Together these interventions have the potential to reduce the burden of alcohol-related road traffic injuries by 24%. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20130386 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Value in Health, Vol. 16 (2013), No. 1 (January-February), p. 23-30, 57 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.