Inequalities in Health Impact of Alternative Reimbursement Pathways for Nirsevimab in the United States

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Abstract

The target populations and financing mechanisms for a new health technology may affect health inequalities in access and impact. We projected the distributional consequences of introducing nirsevimab for prevention of respiratory syncytial virus in a US birth cohort of infants through alternative reimbursement pathway scenarios. Using the RSV immunization impact model, we estimated that a vaccine-like reimbursement pathway would cover 32% more infants than a pharmaceutical pathway. The vaccine pathway would avert 30% more hospitalizations and 39% more emergency room visits overall, and 44% and 44%, respectively, in publicly insured infants. The vaccine pathway would benefit infants from poorer households.

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Gomez, G. B., Nelson, C. B., Rizzo, C., Shepard, D. S., & Chaves, S. S. (2022). Inequalities in Health Impact of Alternative Reimbursement Pathways for Nirsevimab in the United States. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 226, S293–S299. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiac164

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