Mapping Evidence on the Regulations Affecting the Accessibility, Availability, and Management of Snake Antivenom Globally: A Scoping Review.

IF 2.6 4区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Ramsha Majeed, Janette Bester, Kabelo Kgarosi, Morné Strydom
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Abstract

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared snakebite envenoming (SBE) as a neglected tropical disease in 2017. Antivenom is the gold standard of treatment, but many healthcare barriers exist, and hence, affected populations are often unable to access it. The challenge is further perpetuated by the lack of attention from national health authorities, poor regulatory systems and policies, and mismanagement of antivenom. This study aims to map the evidence regarding snake antivenom regulations globally and identify gaps in the literature to inform future research and policy. This review was conducted using the original Arksey and O'Malley framework by three independent reviewers, and the results were reported using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analysis Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR). A search strategy was developed with assistance from a librarian, and six databases were searched: PubMed, SCOPUS, ProQuest Central, Africa Wide Web, Academic Search Output, and Web of Science. Screening was conducted independently by the reviewers, using Rayyan, and conflicts were resolved with discussions. A total of 84 articles were included for data extraction. The major themes that emerged from the included studies were regarding antivenom availability, accessibility, manufacturing, and regulations. The study revealed massive gaps in terms of policies governing antivenom management, especially in Asia and Africa. The literature does not offer sufficient evidence on management guidelines for antivenom in the endemic regions, despite identifying the challenges in supply. However, significant information from Latin America revealed self-sufficient production, involvement of national health bodies in establishing efficient regulations, effective distribution nationally and regionally, and technology sharing to reduce SBE-related mortality.

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影响全球蛇抗蛇毒血清可及性、可用性和管理的法规的证据绘制:范围审查。
2017年,世界卫生组织宣布蛇咬伤(SBE)为一种被忽视的热带病。抗蛇毒血清是治疗的黄金标准,但存在许多卫生保健障碍,因此,受影响的人群往往无法获得它。由于国家卫生当局缺乏重视、监管系统和政策不健全以及抗蛇毒血清管理不善,这一挑战进一步延续下去。本研究旨在绘制全球抗蛇毒血清法规的证据图,并确定文献中的空白,为未来的研究和政策提供信息。本综述由三名独立审稿人使用原始的Arksey和O'Malley框架进行,结果使用系统评价首选报告项目和荟萃分析扩展范围评价(PRISMA-ScR)进行报告。在图书管理员的协助下制定了搜索策略,并对六个数据库进行了搜索:PubMed、SCOPUS、ProQuest Central、Africa Wide Web、Academic search Output和Web of Science。筛选由审稿人独立进行,使用Rayyan,冲突通过讨论解决。共纳入84篇文章进行数据提取。从纳入的研究中出现的主要主题是关于抗蛇毒血清的可用性,可及性,制造和法规。该研究显示,在抗蛇毒血清管理政策方面存在巨大差距,特别是在亚洲和非洲。尽管确定了供应方面的挑战,但文献并没有提供足够的证据来说明流行地区抗蛇毒血清的管理指南。然而,来自拉丁美洲的重要信息显示,自给自足的生产、国家卫生机构参与制定有效的法规、国家和区域的有效分配以及技术共享,以减少与sbe有关的死亡率。
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
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
10.30%
发文量
353
审稿时长
11 weeks
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