Journal Design Clinical Emerald
African Food Systems Research (Interdisciplinary - incl Agri/Env) | 10 June 2019

A Meta-Analysis of Methodological Approaches and Cost-Effectiveness in Uganda's Public Health Surveillance Systems

A Panel-Data Evaluation, 2000–2026
P, a, t, i, e, n, c, e, N, a, k, i, m, u, l, i, ,, J, u, l, i, u, s, O, c, e, n, ,, D, a, v, i, d, K, i, g, o, z, i, ,, R, u, t, h, M, b, a, b, a, z, i
surveillance evaluationpanel datacost-effectivenessUganda
Synthesis reveals 65% of prior evaluations relied on cross-sectional designs.
Panel-data econometrics provides more reliable cost-effectiveness metrics.
Integrated, multi-disease approaches emerge as the most economically efficient model.

Abstract

{ "background": "Public health surveillance is a cornerstone of effective disease control, yet the methodological rigour and economic efficiency of such systems in resource-limited settings are not well synthesised. Uganda's diverse surveillance infrastructure, developed over decades, presents a critical case for evaluating analytical approaches and their associated costs.", "purpose and objectives": "This meta-analysis aims to systematically evaluate methodological approaches used in assessing the country's public health surveillance systems and to estimate their cost-effectiveness using panel-data econometric techniques.", "methodology": "We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of peer-reviewed and grey literature. Eligible studies were synthesised, and a bespoke panel-data model was constructed for cost-effectiveness estimation. The primary model specification was a two-way fixed effects regression: $Y{it} = \\alpha + \\beta1CE{it} + \\beta2M{it} + \\mui + \\lambdat + \\epsilon{it}$, where $Y{it}$ is a surveillance performance outcome, $CE{it}$ denotes cost-effectiveness metrics, $M{it}$ represents methodological covariates, and $\\mui$ and $\\lambda_t$ are entity and time fixed effects. Inference was based on cluster-robust standard errors.", "findings": "The synthesis identified a predominant reliance on cross-sectional designs (approximately 65% of included studies), which correlated with higher variability in cost-effectiveness estimates. The panel-data estimation revealed that integrated disease surveillance and response (IDSR) strategies showed significantly superior cost-effectiveness ratios compared to vertical programmes, with a likelihood exceeding 95% that the difference is not due to chance.", "conclusion": "Methodological choices, particularly the use of longitudinal data structures, substantially influence the measured cost-effectiveness of surveillance systems. The evidence indicates that integrated, multi-disease approaches represent a more economically efficient model for sustained surveillance.", "recommendations": "Future surveillance evaluations should prioritise longitudinal, panel-data designs to generate more reliable economic metrics. Policymakers should advocate for and fund the integration of