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S. Ciriminna

Bio: S. Ciriminna is an academic researcher. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 9 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The demographic and economic data obtained highlights not only the social and economic impact of the epidemic, but also provides relevant information useful for cost-effectiveness analysis.
Abstract: Objective To determine the direct and indirect costs associated with a measles epidemic occurring between September 1996 and August 1997 in Palermo (Italy) in paediatric-aged patients.

9 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
23 Oct 2007-Vaccine
TL;DR: A study in Piemonte (Italy) to describe incidence, treatment, hospitalizations and costs of herpes zoster (HZ), in population over 14 years of age, and to provide background data for setting-up either mathematical models aimed to estimate the impact of vaccination on HZ, and the cost-benefit analyses of various preventive and therapeutic scenarios.

50 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that routine ZVZ vaccination may be cost saving from both a societal and a health system perspective in the base case, and in the worst-case scenario of the sensitivity analysis, vaccination remains cost effective.
Abstract: Aim: To determine the economic impact (cost-benefit analysis) of childhood varicella vaccination, with the Oka/Merck varicella zoster virus vaccine live (Varivax®) in Italy. Methods: This analysis is based on an epidemiological model of varicella zoster virus (VZV) dynamics adapted to the Italian situation. Cost data (€, 2002 values) were collected through a literature review. Several vaccination scenarios were analysed: (i) routine vaccination programme for children aged 1–2 years with different levels of vaccination coverage (90%, 70% and 45%) without any catch-up programme; (ii) routine vaccination programme for children aged 1–2 years with different levels of vaccination coverage (90%, 70% and 45%) completed by a catch-up programme for 6-year-old children over the first 5 years of vaccine marketing; and (iii) routine vaccination programme for children aged 1–2 years with different levels of vaccination coverage (90%, 70% and 45%) completed by a catch-up programme during the first year of vaccine marketing for children aged 2–11 years. Perspectives: A societal perspective, including both direct and indirect costs, and a health-system perspective, limited to costs supported by Italian Health Authorities, were considered. Results: A routine vaccination programme has a clearly positive impact on chickenpox morbidity. Respectively, 68% and 57% of chickenpox-related hospitalisations and deaths could be prevented with a 90% coverage rate. With vaccination costs being more than offset by a reduction in chickenpox treatment costs in the base case, such a programme could also induce savings from both a societal and a health-system perspective (40% and 12% savings, respectively for a 90% coverage rate). A lower coverage rate reduces cost savings, but there is still a 9% decrease in overall societal costs for a 45% coverage rate. Although the reduction in total societal costs was robust to the sensitivity analyses performed, a slight uncertainty remains regarding cost reduction from a health-system perspective. However, in this latter perspective, even in the worst-case scenario of the sensitivity analysis, routine vaccination programmes may be cost effective, the worst-case scenario for cost parameters leading to cost per life-year gained of €2853. Catch-up programmes combined with routine vaccination should lead to further cost reductions from a societal perspective: 15% for a massive catch-up during the first year of vaccine marketing compared with toddlers’ vaccination alone, and 11% for a catch-up focused on 6-year-old children for a period of 5 years. However, the impact of catch-up programmes on the costs from an Italian health-system perspective remains close to zero (±1%). Conclusion: This model suggests, with its underlying assumptions and data, that routine ZVZ vaccination may be cost saving from both a societal and a health system perspective in the base case. In the worst-case scenario of the sensitivity analysis, vaccination remains cost effective.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Sep 2004-Vaccine
TL;DR: An economic evaluation was performed to assess five varicella vaccination scenarios targeted to 11-year-old Italian adolescents, and "both tests" and "anamnestic screening" were the most appealing options.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 2003-Vaccine
TL;DR: The costs of measles and measles control in 11 industrialised countries with varying levels of measles vaccine coverage can be used to estimate potential savings that might accrue from changes to measles control programmes.

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Italian pharmacoeconomists are far from reaching any consensus on methods for evaluating indirect costs, and methods need to be standardized particularly with respect to the parameters used to quantify productive time lost in monetary terms.

17 citations