Cargando…

Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon

In the Brazilian Amazon, long distances, low healthcare coverage, common use of ineffective or deleterious self-care practices, and resistance to seeking medical assistance have an impact on access to antivenom treatment. This study aimed to estimate snakebite underreporting, and analyze barriers th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Maciel Salazar, Guilherme Kemeron, Saturnino Cristino, Joseir, Vilhena Silva-Neto, Alexandre, Seabra Farias, Altair, Alcântara, João Arthur, Azevedo Machado, Vinícius, Murta, Felipe, Souza Sampaio, Vanderson, Val, Fernando, Sachett, André, Bernarde, Paulo Sérgio, Lacerda, Marcus, Hui Wen, Fan, Monteiro, Wuelton, Sachett, Jacqueline
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8454940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34499643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009758
_version_ 1784570578157436928
author Maciel Salazar, Guilherme Kemeron
Saturnino Cristino, Joseir
Vilhena Silva-Neto, Alexandre
Seabra Farias, Altair
Alcântara, João Arthur
Azevedo Machado, Vinícius
Murta, Felipe
Souza Sampaio, Vanderson
Val, Fernando
Sachett, André
Bernarde, Paulo Sérgio
Lacerda, Marcus
Hui Wen, Fan
Monteiro, Wuelton
Sachett, Jacqueline
author_facet Maciel Salazar, Guilherme Kemeron
Saturnino Cristino, Joseir
Vilhena Silva-Neto, Alexandre
Seabra Farias, Altair
Alcântara, João Arthur
Azevedo Machado, Vinícius
Murta, Felipe
Souza Sampaio, Vanderson
Val, Fernando
Sachett, André
Bernarde, Paulo Sérgio
Lacerda, Marcus
Hui Wen, Fan
Monteiro, Wuelton
Sachett, Jacqueline
author_sort Maciel Salazar, Guilherme Kemeron
collection PubMed
description In the Brazilian Amazon, long distances, low healthcare coverage, common use of ineffective or deleterious self-care practices, and resistance to seeking medical assistance have an impact on access to antivenom treatment. This study aimed to estimate snakebite underreporting, and analyze barriers that prevent victims from obtaining healthcare in communities located in 15 municipalities on the banks of the Solimões, Juruá and Purus Rivers, in the remote Western Brazilian Amazon. Information on the participants’ demographics, previous snakebites, access to healthcare, time taken to reach medical assistance, use of self-care practices, and the reason for not accessing healthcare were collected through semi-structured interviews. In the case of deaths, information was collected by interviewing parents, relatives or acquaintances. A total of 172 participants who reported having suffered snakebites during their lifetime were interviewed. A total of 73 different treatment procedures was reported by 65.1% of the participants. Participants living in different river basins share few self-care procedures that use traditional medicine, and 91 (52.9%) participants reported that they had access to healthcare. Living in communities along the Juruá River [OR = 12.6 (95% CI = 3.2–49.7; p<0.001)] and the use of traditional medicine [OR = 11.6 (95% CI = 3.4–39.8; p<0.001)] were variables that were independently associated to the lack of access to healthcare. The main reasons for not accessing healthcare were the pprioritization of traditional treatments (70.4%), and the failure to recognize the situation as being potentially severe (50.6%). Four deaths from complications arising from the snakebite were reported, and three of these were from communities on the banks of the Juruá River. Only one of these received medical assistance. We found an unexpectedly high underreporting of snakebite cases and associated deaths. Snakebite victims utilized three main different healing systems: 1) self-care using miscellaneous techniques; 2) official medical healthcare generally combined with traditional practices; and 3) self-care using traditional practices combined with Western medicines. To mitigate snakebite burden in the Brazilian Amazon, an innovative intervention that would optimize timely delivery of care, including antivenom distribution among existing community healthcare centers, is needed.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8454940
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-84549402021-09-22 Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon Maciel Salazar, Guilherme Kemeron Saturnino Cristino, Joseir Vilhena Silva-Neto, Alexandre Seabra Farias, Altair Alcântara, João Arthur Azevedo Machado, Vinícius Murta, Felipe Souza Sampaio, Vanderson Val, Fernando Sachett, André Bernarde, Paulo Sérgio Lacerda, Marcus Hui Wen, Fan Monteiro, Wuelton Sachett, Jacqueline PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article In the Brazilian Amazon, long distances, low healthcare coverage, common use of ineffective or deleterious self-care practices, and resistance to seeking medical assistance have an impact on access to antivenom treatment. This study aimed to estimate snakebite underreporting, and analyze barriers that prevent victims from obtaining healthcare in communities located in 15 municipalities on the banks of the Solimões, Juruá and Purus Rivers, in the remote Western Brazilian Amazon. Information on the participants’ demographics, previous snakebites, access to healthcare, time taken to reach medical assistance, use of self-care practices, and the reason for not accessing healthcare were collected through semi-structured interviews. In the case of deaths, information was collected by interviewing parents, relatives or acquaintances. A total of 172 participants who reported having suffered snakebites during their lifetime were interviewed. A total of 73 different treatment procedures was reported by 65.1% of the participants. Participants living in different river basins share few self-care procedures that use traditional medicine, and 91 (52.9%) participants reported that they had access to healthcare. Living in communities along the Juruá River [OR = 12.6 (95% CI = 3.2–49.7; p<0.001)] and the use of traditional medicine [OR = 11.6 (95% CI = 3.4–39.8; p<0.001)] were variables that were independently associated to the lack of access to healthcare. The main reasons for not accessing healthcare were the pprioritization of traditional treatments (70.4%), and the failure to recognize the situation as being potentially severe (50.6%). Four deaths from complications arising from the snakebite were reported, and three of these were from communities on the banks of the Juruá River. Only one of these received medical assistance. We found an unexpectedly high underreporting of snakebite cases and associated deaths. Snakebite victims utilized three main different healing systems: 1) self-care using miscellaneous techniques; 2) official medical healthcare generally combined with traditional practices; and 3) self-care using traditional practices combined with Western medicines. To mitigate snakebite burden in the Brazilian Amazon, an innovative intervention that would optimize timely delivery of care, including antivenom distribution among existing community healthcare centers, is needed. Public Library of Science 2021-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8454940/ /pubmed/34499643 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009758 Text en © 2021 Maciel Salazar et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Maciel Salazar, Guilherme Kemeron
Saturnino Cristino, Joseir
Vilhena Silva-Neto, Alexandre
Seabra Farias, Altair
Alcântara, João Arthur
Azevedo Machado, Vinícius
Murta, Felipe
Souza Sampaio, Vanderson
Val, Fernando
Sachett, André
Bernarde, Paulo Sérgio
Lacerda, Marcus
Hui Wen, Fan
Monteiro, Wuelton
Sachett, Jacqueline
Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon
title Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon
title_full Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon
title_fullStr Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon
title_short Snakebites in “Invisible Populations”: A cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western Brazilian Amazon
title_sort snakebites in “invisible populations”: a cross-sectional survey in riverine populations in the remote western brazilian amazon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8454940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34499643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009758
work_keys_str_mv AT macielsalazarguilhermekemeron snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT saturninocristinojoseir snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT vilhenasilvanetoalexandre snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT seabrafariasaltair snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT alcantarajoaoarthur snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT azevedomachadovinicius snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT murtafelipe snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT souzasampaiovanderson snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT valfernando snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT sachettandre snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT bernardepaulosergio snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT lacerdamarcus snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT huiwenfan snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT monteirowuelton snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon
AT sachettjacqueline snakebitesininvisiblepopulationsacrosssectionalsurveyinriverinepopulationsintheremotewesternbrazilianamazon