Publications

Research outputs, reports, policy briefs and knowledge products from KIU scholars and partners.

2025 School of Pharmacy IDOSR JOURNAL OF APPLIED SCIENCES

Comparative Cost-Effectiveness of Typhoid Vaccination and Treatment in Rural vs. Urban Ugandan Healthcare Settings

Waiswa Arajab

Typhoid fever remains a persistent public health challenge in Uganda, with both urban and rural populations experiencing high disease and economic burdens. While antimicrobial treatment has historically been the mainstay of management, rising antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has significantly increased treatment costs and reduced effectiveness. This review compares the cost-effectiveness of typhoid treatment and vaccination across urban and rural Ugandan healthcare settings, highlighting differences in epidemiology, infrastructure, and socio-economic conditions. Evidence indicates that in urban centers, where population density and outbreak frequency are high, typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCVs) rapidly reduce healthcare costs through economies of scale, decreased hospitalizations, and prevention of resistant infections. In rural areas, despite higher delivery and logistical costs, vaccination often proves even more cost-effective given the severe indirect costs of illness, such as delayed care, transportation expenses, lost productivity, and poorer outcomes. Key challenges include data gaps, logistical barriers, vaccine acceptance, and financial constraints. Policy recommendations emphasize prioritizing high-burden urban slums while carefully expanding rural rollout, integrating vaccination with water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) improvements, strengthening rural health infrastructure, and enhancing AMR surveillance. Overall, vaccination emerges as a sustainable, equitable strategy to reduce Uganda’s typhoid burden and support broader global health goals. Keywords: Typhoid fever; cost-effectiveness; Uganda; rural health; urban health; vaccination.