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Fig. 2 | Malaria Journal

Fig. 2

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. 2

Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves for the cohort of children under five years of age and individuals of all ages. The curves graphically represent the probability of adopting IRS with pirimiphos-methyl under high pyrethroid insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) being cost-effective at specific willingness-to-pay values, compared to not adopting IRS with pirimiphos-methyl under high pyrethroid ITN coverage. The vertical lines correspond to the standard cost-effectiveness thresholds by the World Health Organization. CE cost-effectiveness, Children U5 children under five years of age, DALY disability-adjusted life-year, IRS indoor-residual spraying

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