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The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths

BACKGROUND: Envenoming resulting from snakebites is an important public health problem in many tropical and subtropical countries. Few attempts have been made to quantify the burden, and recent estimates all suffer from the lack of an objective and reproducible methodology. In an attempt to provide...

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Autores principales: Kasturiratne, Anuradhani, Wickremasinghe, A. Rajitha, de Silva, Nilanthi, Gunawardena, N. Kithsiri, Pathmeswaran, Arunasalam, Premaratna, Ranjan, Savioli, Lorenzo, Lalloo, David G, de Silva, H. Janaka
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2577696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18986210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050218
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author Kasturiratne, Anuradhani
Wickremasinghe, A. Rajitha
de Silva, Nilanthi
Gunawardena, N. Kithsiri
Pathmeswaran, Arunasalam
Premaratna, Ranjan
Savioli, Lorenzo
Lalloo, David G
de Silva, H. Janaka
author_facet Kasturiratne, Anuradhani
Wickremasinghe, A. Rajitha
de Silva, Nilanthi
Gunawardena, N. Kithsiri
Pathmeswaran, Arunasalam
Premaratna, Ranjan
Savioli, Lorenzo
Lalloo, David G
de Silva, H. Janaka
author_sort Kasturiratne, Anuradhani
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Envenoming resulting from snakebites is an important public health problem in many tropical and subtropical countries. Few attempts have been made to quantify the burden, and recent estimates all suffer from the lack of an objective and reproducible methodology. In an attempt to provide an accurate, up-to-date estimate of the scale of the global problem, we developed a new method to estimate the disease burden due to snakebites. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The global estimates were based on regional estimates that were, in turn, derived from data available for countries within a defined region. Three main strategies were used to obtain primary data: electronic searching for publications on snakebite, extraction of relevant country-specific mortality data from databases maintained by United Nations organizations, and identification of grey literature by discussion with key informants. Countries were grouped into 21 distinct geographic regions that are as epidemiologically homogenous as possible, in line with the Global Burden of Disease 2005 study (Global Burden Project of the World Bank). Incidence rates for envenoming were extracted from publications and used to estimate the number of envenomings for individual countries; if no data were available for a particular country, the lowest incidence rate within a neighbouring country was used. Where death registration data were reliable, reported deaths from snakebite were used; in other countries, deaths were estimated on the basis of observed mortality rates and the at-risk population. We estimate that, globally, at least 421,000 envenomings and 20,000 deaths occur each year due to snakebite. These figures may be as high as 1,841,000 envenomings and 94,000 deaths. Based on the fact that envenoming occurs in about one in every four snakebites, between 1.2 million and 5.5 million snakebites could occur annually. CONCLUSIONS: Snakebites cause considerable morbidity and mortality worldwide. The highest burden exists in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa.
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spelling pubmed-25776962008-11-25 The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths Kasturiratne, Anuradhani Wickremasinghe, A. Rajitha de Silva, Nilanthi Gunawardena, N. Kithsiri Pathmeswaran, Arunasalam Premaratna, Ranjan Savioli, Lorenzo Lalloo, David G de Silva, H. Janaka PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: Envenoming resulting from snakebites is an important public health problem in many tropical and subtropical countries. Few attempts have been made to quantify the burden, and recent estimates all suffer from the lack of an objective and reproducible methodology. In an attempt to provide an accurate, up-to-date estimate of the scale of the global problem, we developed a new method to estimate the disease burden due to snakebites. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The global estimates were based on regional estimates that were, in turn, derived from data available for countries within a defined region. Three main strategies were used to obtain primary data: electronic searching for publications on snakebite, extraction of relevant country-specific mortality data from databases maintained by United Nations organizations, and identification of grey literature by discussion with key informants. Countries were grouped into 21 distinct geographic regions that are as epidemiologically homogenous as possible, in line with the Global Burden of Disease 2005 study (Global Burden Project of the World Bank). Incidence rates for envenoming were extracted from publications and used to estimate the number of envenomings for individual countries; if no data were available for a particular country, the lowest incidence rate within a neighbouring country was used. Where death registration data were reliable, reported deaths from snakebite were used; in other countries, deaths were estimated on the basis of observed mortality rates and the at-risk population. We estimate that, globally, at least 421,000 envenomings and 20,000 deaths occur each year due to snakebite. These figures may be as high as 1,841,000 envenomings and 94,000 deaths. Based on the fact that envenoming occurs in about one in every four snakebites, between 1.2 million and 5.5 million snakebites could occur annually. CONCLUSIONS: Snakebites cause considerable morbidity and mortality worldwide. The highest burden exists in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa. Public Library of Science 2008-11 2008-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2577696/ /pubmed/18986210 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050218 Text en : © 2008 Kasturiratne et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kasturiratne, Anuradhani
Wickremasinghe, A. Rajitha
de Silva, Nilanthi
Gunawardena, N. Kithsiri
Pathmeswaran, Arunasalam
Premaratna, Ranjan
Savioli, Lorenzo
Lalloo, David G
de Silva, H. Janaka
The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths
title The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths
title_full The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths
title_fullStr The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths
title_full_unstemmed The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths
title_short The Global Burden of Snakebite: A Literature Analysis and Modelling Based on Regional Estimates of Envenoming and Deaths
title_sort global burden of snakebite: a literature analysis and modelling based on regional estimates of envenoming and deaths
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2577696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18986210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050218
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