Snakebite envenoming in humanitarian crises and migration: A scoping review and the Médecins Sans Frontières experience

IF 3.6 Q2 TOXICOLOGY
Gabriel Alcoba , Julien Potet , Renaud Vatrinet , Saschveen Singh , Carolina Nanclares , Alexandra Kruse , Margriet Den Boer , Lucas Molfino , Koert Ritmeijer
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Snakebite envenoming is a public health concern in many countries affected by humanitarian crises. Its magnitude was recognized internationally but associations between snakebite peaks and humanitarian crises were never clearly established or analysed. This scoping review searched any available evidence of this hypothesized association between snakebite types of crises, through PubMed/Medline by two researchers. The search also included hand searching, and reports from humanitarian organizations working in this area.

The scoping review yielded 41 results. None described a robust epidemiological link or evidence of causality. There is an evidence gap regarding our research question. Several publications however point or hint towards the occurrence of snakebite outbreaks during conflict, displacement, floods, and migration of impoverished agricultural workers. Non-systematic screening yielded another 11 publications (52 in total). We found Médecins Sans Frontières routine reports showing that 6469 patients were admitted in 2019 throughout its projects in 17 countries. The impact of snakebite was the highest in four countries particularly affected by humanitarian crises, South Sudan, Ethiopia, Central African Republic, and Yemen, with some hospitals receiving more than 1000 annual admissions. Time correlations with conflict and events are shown in Figures. We found no published epidemiological data formally showing any associations between humanitarian crises and snakebite incidence. However, the search publications showing peaks during crises, and monitoring curves in four countries point towards an increased risk during humanitarian crises.

We call for urgent population-based studies and surveillance. Stakeholders should consider upgrading snakebite care and antivenom supply during humanitarian crises in snakebite-endemic countries.

Abstract Image

人道主义危机和移民中的蛇咬伤:范围审查和无国界组织的经验
在许多受人道主义危机影响的国家,蛇咬伤是一个公共卫生问题。它的严重程度在国际上得到了承认,但蛇咬伤高峰与人道主义危机之间的联系从未得到明确确立或分析。通过PubMed/Medline,两位研究人员搜索了蛇咬伤类型危机之间这种假设关联的任何可用证据。搜索还包括手工搜索,以及在该地区工作的人道主义组织的报告。范围审查产生了41个结果。没有一个描述了强有力的流行病学联系或因果关系的证据。关于我们的研究问题有一个证据缺口。然而,一些出版物指出或暗示在冲突、流离失所、洪水和贫困农业工人移徙期间发生蛇咬伤事件。非系统筛选产生了另外11篇出版物(总共52篇)。我们发现,无国界医生组织的例行报告显示,2019年,该组织在17个国家的项目中收治了6469名患者。在受人道主义危机影响特别严重的四个国家,即南苏丹、埃塞俄比亚、中非共和国和也门,蛇咬伤的影响最大,一些医院每年接收的病人超过1000人。冲突和事件的时间相关性如图所示。我们没有发现公开的流行病学数据正式表明人道主义危机与蛇咬伤发生率之间存在任何关联。然而,搜索出版物显示危机期间的峰值,四个国家的监测曲线表明人道主义危机期间的风险增加。我们呼吁紧急开展以人群为基础的研究和监测。利益攸关方应考虑在蛇咬伤流行国家的人道主义危机期间提高蛇咬伤护理和抗蛇毒血清供应。
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来源期刊
Toxicon: X
Toxicon: X Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics-Toxicology
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
审稿时长
14 weeks
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