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Adolescent Health
Adolescents in Rajasthan
• Rajasthan has 1.57 crores adolescents, which is
-23% of the total population of the state
- Hig...
Adolescents Health Problems in Rajasthan
• 35.4% women aged 20-24 years got married before 18 years (NFHS 4).
• 81% of ado...
Solutions for these critical adolescent health problems
A stakeholder consultation to identify and prioritize the adolesce...
1st analyzed solution
Delaying child marriage in Rajasthan by providing incentives
Description of the solution
• The proposed intervention will provide incentives to households in
rural areas in the form o...
Costs of this intervention
• Estimated costs include cost for the incentive, cost for schooling and
cost for implementing ...
Benefits of this intervention
• The avoided social cost of child marriage is the major benefit.
• Social cost of child mar...
Benefit-cost ratio of delaying child marriage
Discount rate
3% 5% 8%
Benefits (INR) 10,594 6,728 3,732
Cost (INR) 2,092 2,...
2nd analyzed solution
Preventing anaemia among the adolescent girls through iron and folic
acid supplementation
Description of the solution
• This intervention aims to provide weekly iron and folic acid supplementation and
biannual de...
Costs of this intervention
• The costs of providing iron and folic acid supplements and of facilitating
counselling sessio...
Benefits of this intervention
• The intervention is expected to decrease the prevalence rate from existing
81% to 47%, a r...
Benefits of this intervention
The estimated total value of benefits per annum is Rs. 766 crore for
around 25 lakhs of aver...
Benefit-cost ratio of preventing anemia among adolescent girls
Discount rate
3% 5% 8%
Benefits (INR) 771 766 758
Cost (INR...
3rd analyzed solution
School-based behavioral screening and further mental health
services for the adolescents
Description of the solution
• This intervention will enrol students of classes VI to XII enrolled covering the
11-17 years...
Description of the solution
• The screening will be carried out through a self-administered
questionnaire based on three s...
Costs of this intervention
Cost inputs Total cost in crores (Rs.)
Stage 1 – Enrolment and screening for 64.4 lakhs benefic...
Benefits of this intervention
• 446 lives are lost due to self-harm and 19,311 years lived with disabilities
(YLD) due to ...
Benefit-cost ratio of identifying and treating mental illness
among school-going adolescents
Discount rate
3% 5% 8%
Benefi...
Conclusion
• The analysis reveals that delaying child marriage, preventing anemia
among adolescent girls and addressing me...
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Rajasthan priorities adolescents, iihmr

Rajasthan priorities adolescents, iihmr

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Rajasthan priorities adolescents, iihmr

  1. 1. Adolescent Health
  2. 2. Adolescents in Rajasthan • Rajasthan has 1.57 crores adolescents, which is -23% of the total population of the state - Higher than the national percentage 21% • This high number of adolescents offers demographic dividend • Ensuring optimum adolescent health is essential to realize this demographic dividend.
  3. 3. Adolescents Health Problems in Rajasthan • 35.4% women aged 20-24 years got married before 18 years (NFHS 4). • 81% of adolescent girls suffer from anemia (DLHS 2014). • Around 60 lakh adolescent girls have any type of anemia, of which 1.2 lakh are suffering from severe anemia. • High burden of mental illness among adolescents including depression, anxiety, intellectual disabilities, autism and psychotic disorders (National Mental Health Survey 2016)
  4. 4. Solutions for these critical adolescent health problems A stakeholder consultation to identify and prioritize the adolescent health problems was held in Rajasthan which revealed following solutions for cost-benefit analysis: - Delaying child marriage via direct incentives - Preventing anemia among adolescent girls - School based behavioral screening and further mental health services for the adolescents
  5. 5. 1st analyzed solution Delaying child marriage in Rajasthan by providing incentives
  6. 6. Description of the solution • The proposed intervention will provide incentives to households in rural areas in the form of a consumable on the condition that their girl children are not married before 18 years of age. • It aims to target around 6.9 lakh 14-year-old girls who are both in school and out of school, and follow this cohort for next the 4 years till they reach 18 years of age.
  7. 7. Costs of this intervention • Estimated costs include cost for the incentive, cost for schooling and cost for implementing the program. •About 2000 crores (5% discount rate) for 6.9 lakh adolescent girls over a period of 4 years •Approx. Rs.29000 per girl enrolled to this intervention for 4 years.
  8. 8. Benefits of this intervention • The avoided social cost of child marriage is the major benefit. • Social cost of child marriage consisting costs due to higher fertility rate, domestic violence, stunting among children and high maternal mortality. • The total benefit from avoided marriage is 6,728 crore at the 5% discount rate. • Education and consumables are other benefits of this intervention.
  9. 9. Benefit-cost ratio of delaying child marriage Discount rate 3% 5% 8% Benefits (INR) 10,594 6,728 3,732 Cost (INR) 2,092 2,000 1,873 BCR 5.1 3.4 2.0
  10. 10. 2nd analyzed solution Preventing anaemia among the adolescent girls through iron and folic acid supplementation
  11. 11. Description of the solution • This intervention aims to provide weekly iron and folic acid supplementation and biannual deworming with an aim of covering all adolescent girls aged 10 to 19 years. • For school-going girls, the intervention will be implemented through the existing educational setup involving the teachers whereas for out-of-school adolescent girls, tablets and counselling sessions will be provided by healthcare providers at the community level. • This intervention is in line with the existing weekly iron and folic acid supplementation (WIFS) program.
  12. 12. Costs of this intervention • The costs of providing iron and folic acid supplements and of facilitating counselling sessions for the program are considered as direct costs. • The opportunity cost of time spent by the out-of-school girls for attending counselling sessions has also been included in the cost as per existing wage rate for the given education level. • Adding these two components, the total annual cost of the intervention is Rs 83 crore.
  13. 13. Benefits of this intervention • The intervention is expected to decrease the prevalence rate from existing 81% to 47%, a reduction of 42% averting 25 lakh cases of anemia in the target group. • The benefit from this intervention is the averted number of cases in different categories and the total value of averted YLDs after excluding the impact of side-effects suffered by some beneficiaries during the course of the program.
  14. 14. Benefits of this intervention The estimated total value of benefits per annum is Rs. 766 crore for around 25 lakhs of averted cases. Anemia Cases averted YLD per case Total YLDs Value per DALY (2017) Total benefits (Rs Crores) Total benefits excluding side effects (Rs Crores) Mild 1,905,818 0.00262 4998 285853 142.9 126.9 Moderate 561,444 0.03410 19143 285853 547.2 485.8 Severe 61,810 0.09770 6039 285853 172.6 153.2 Total 2,529,072 30,180 862.7 765.9
  15. 15. Benefit-cost ratio of preventing anemia among adolescent girls Discount rate 3% 5% 8% Benefits (INR) 771 766 758 Cost (INR) 83 83 83 BCR 9.3 9.2 9.1
  16. 16. 3rd analyzed solution School-based behavioral screening and further mental health services for the adolescents
  17. 17. Description of the solution • This intervention will enrol students of classes VI to XII enrolled covering the 11-17 years age group of the state’s school-going population. • It comprises screening the mental health status of adolescents, referring them to appropriate care providers and treating them for respective disorders. • The participation will be voluntary and require the assent of the adolescent and consent of their parent or guardian.
  18. 18. Description of the solution • The screening will be carried out through a self-administered questionnaire based on three scales- mood and feeling questionnaire, youth self-report aggression scale and 3-point Likert scale. • The students screened positive for illnesses will be scheduled for clinical behavioral health evaluation. Positive cases found at that stage will be referred for specialized mental healthcare services with adequate follow- ups to ensure that the child is linked to a facility for proper treatment.
  19. 19. Costs of this intervention Cost inputs Total cost in crores (Rs.) Stage 1 – Enrolment and screening for 64.4 lakhs beneficiaries 14.9 Stage 2 – Clinical evaluation for screen positive (18%) totaling 11.6 lakhs beneficiaries 17.9 Stage 3 – Referral services for 60% students comprising 5.63 lakhs beneficiaries 14.4 Stage 4 – Linkage to specialized mental healthcare provider for 72% totaling 4.05 lakhs beneficiaries 14.6 Cost of treatment for 4.05 lakhs beneficiaries 126.8 Opportunity cost of time for treatment + caregivers time 10.1 Total cost of the intervention (undiscounted) 199 Total cost of the intervention (@ 5% discount rate) is Rs. 189 crores
  20. 20. Benefits of this intervention • 446 lives are lost due to self-harm and 19,311 years lived with disabilities (YLD) due to mental illness among the adolescents is calculated from the Global Burden of Diseases data. • Further, averted YLL and YLD is calculated following the intervention and it is multiplied with the respective values of statistical life years and disability adjusted life years. • The annual benefit of the intervention at 5% discount rate is Rs. 264 crore.
  21. 21. Benefit-cost ratio of identifying and treating mental illness among school-going adolescents Discount rate 3% 5% 8% Benefits (INR) 268.7 263.6 256.3 Cost (INR) 193.2 189.4 183.7 BCR 1.4 1.4 1.4
  22. 22. Conclusion • The analysis reveals that delaying child marriage, preventing anemia among adolescent girls and addressing mental health issues through school-based intervention can yield higher benefit per unit of invested cost. • The evidence-based results show these interventions can be adopted as prioritized policies in Rajasthan, as adolescents play a pivotal role in the future of the state.
  23. 23. Thanks for your attention and presence

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