Snakebite health outcomes and influencing factors in high-incidence Asian countries: A systematic review

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Myat Myat Thein , Julian White , Chen Au Peh , Zohra Lassi , Mohammad Afzal Mahmood
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Snakebites are a global public health problem and one of the neglected tropical diseases. Community factors and health system factors influence snakebite health outcomes. This systematic review provides evidence of the relationship between snakebite health outcomes and the factors affecting these outcomes among selected Asian countries with high snakebite incidence to guide snakebite management strategies to improve outcomes for snakebite patients. A systematic review was conducted. We searched articles published in English from 2014 to 2024 on PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science, including studies that discussed snakebite patients with envenoming effects who received management at health facilities and mentioned health outcomes and factors influencing those outcomes. Joanna Briggs Institute standard critical appraisal tools were used for quality assessment. A proportional meta-analysis with a random effects model was performed using STATA software to calculate the overall proportion of snakebite health outcomes. The funnel plot and Egger's test were conducted to investigate publication bias. Heterogeneity (I2) and sensitivity analyses were carried out. Initially, 3354 studies were identified. After screening, 18 relevant studies were included in the analysis, which reported a total of 5344 snakebite patients. The overall recovery and death proportions were 94 % (95 % confidence interval [CI]: 0.92, 0.95) and 5 % (95 % CI: 0.03, 0.08), respectively. The heterogeneity (I2) was high, with values of 83.89 % for pooled recovery and 95.70 % for pooled death, owing to the variability in the nature of the included studies. The pooled recovery and death proportions were similar in selected South Asian and Southeast Asian countries. Twenty-six patients required amputations, 30 were discharged or left the hospital against medical advice, and 22 were transferred to other hospitals. Seven studies highlighted community factors (inappropriate first aid methods and delayed arrival at health facilities), three studies mentioned health system factors (antivenom accessibility and availability of competent healthcare providers), and eight studies discussed both factors as influences on snakebite outcomes. This is the first systematic review to highlight the overall influencing factors across the selected multiple countries with high snakebite incidence regions in Asia. It provides cumulative insights into the factors that are reported by individual studies. Further studies may emphasise the context influencing snakebite health outcomes to understand the enduring reasons behind these factors and enhance snakebite management strategies to address these factors.

Abstract Image

蛇咬伤在亚洲高发病率国家的健康结果和影响因素:一项系统综述
蛇咬伤是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,也是被忽视的热带病之一。社区因素和卫生系统因素影响蛇咬伤的健康结果。本系统综述为选定的蛇咬伤发生率高的亚洲国家的蛇咬伤健康结果与影响这些结果的因素之间的关系提供了证据,以指导蛇咬伤管理策略以改善蛇咬伤患者的结果。进行了系统评价。我们检索了2014年至2024年在PubMed、Scopus和Web of Science上发表的英文文章,包括讨论在医疗机构接受治疗的蛇咬伤患者的环境影响的研究,并提到了健康结果和影响这些结果的因素。乔安娜布里格斯研究所的标准关键评估工具用于质量评估。采用STATA软件进行随机效应模型的比例荟萃分析,计算蛇咬伤健康结局的总体比例。采用漏斗图和Egger检验调查发表偏倚。进行异质性(I2)和敏感性分析。最初,确定了3354项研究。筛选后,18项相关研究纳入分析,共报告了5344例蛇咬伤患者。总恢复率和死亡率分别为94%(95%可信区间[CI]: 0.92, 0.95)和5% (95% CI: 0.03, 0.08)。异质性(I2)很高,由于纳入的研究性质的可变性,合并恢复的值为83.89%,合并死亡的值为95.70%。在选定的南亚和东南亚国家,总恢复和死亡比例相似。26名患者需要截肢,30名患者不顾医嘱出院或离开医院,22名患者被转移到其他医院。7项研究强调了社区因素(不适当的急救方法和延迟到达卫生设施),3项研究提到了卫生系统因素(抗蛇毒血清的可及性和合格卫生保健提供者的可用性),8项研究讨论了这两个因素对蛇咬伤结果的影响。这是第一次系统回顾,突出了在亚洲蛇咬伤高发地区选定的多个国家的总体影响因素。它提供了对个别研究报告的因素的累积见解。进一步的研究可能会强调影响蛇咬伤健康结果的环境,以了解这些因素背后的持久原因,并加强蛇咬伤管理策略以解决这些因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Toxicon
Toxicon 医学-毒理学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
10.70%
发文量
358
审稿时长
68 days
期刊介绍: Toxicon has an open access mirror Toxicon: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review. An introductory offer Toxicon: X - full waiver of the Open Access fee. Toxicon''s "aims and scope" are to publish: -articles containing the results of original research on problems related to toxins derived from animals, plants and microorganisms -papers on novel findings related to the chemical, pharmacological, toxicological, and immunological properties of natural toxins -molecular biological studies of toxins and other genes from poisonous and venomous organisms that advance understanding of the role or function of toxins -clinical observations on poisoning and envenoming where a new therapeutic principle has been proposed or a decidedly superior clinical result has been obtained. -material on the use of toxins as tools in studying biological processes and material on subjects related to venom and antivenom problems. -articles on the translational application of toxins, for example as drugs and insecticides -epidemiological studies on envenoming or poisoning, so long as they highlight a previously unrecognised medical problem or provide insight into the prevention or medical treatment of envenoming or poisoning. Retrospective surveys of hospital records, especially those lacking species identification, will not be considered for publication. Properly designed prospective community-based surveys are strongly encouraged. -articles describing well-known activities of venoms, such as antibacterial, anticancer, and analgesic activities of arachnid venoms, without any attempt to define the mechanism of action or purify the active component, will not be considered for publication in Toxicon. -review articles on problems related to toxinology. To encourage the exchange of ideas, sections of the journal may be devoted to Short Communications, Letters to the Editor and activities of the affiliated societies.
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