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Fig. 1 | Malaria Journal

Fig. 1

From: Cost and cost-effectiveness of indoor residual spraying with pirimiphos-methyl in a high malaria transmission district of Mozambique with high access to standard insecticide-treated nets

Fig. 1

Tornado diagrams showing results from univariate sensitivity analyses. Changes on the deterministic value of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) by changing the value of selected parameters when considering households’ direct and indirect costs (US$). Analyses consider: a children under five years of age (pre-adjustment ICER of US$403.92) and b individuals of all ages (pre-adjustment ICER of US$1,821.86). Changes on the selected parameters had no impact on ICERs in children under five years of age or individuals of all ages with the exception of changes on the efficacy of IRS with pirimiphos-methyl and the insecticide price, which made the intervention cost-effective in individuals of all ages. The vertical lines represent the maximum cost-effectiveness thresholds. DALY disability-adjusted life-year, IRS indoor residual spraying, OR odd ratio

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