2008-2023年美国现役军人中有毒动物咬伤和蜇伤。

Q3 Medicine
MSMR Pub Date : 2025-08-20
Ralph A Stidham, José M Jimenez, Sithembile L Mabila
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究描述了现役军人(ACSMs)中所有医学诊断的咬伤和蜇伤,这些咬伤和蜇伤来自蛇、有毒鱼类、其他有毒海洋动物、节肢动物和昆虫,这些都是通过对国防医疗监测系统(DMSS)的医疗数据进行评估而确定的。确定了2008 - 2023年的发病率趋势,并计算了发病率(IRs)和发病率比(IRRs)。在39,201名acsm中,总共发生了42,552次有毒咬伤和蜇伤医疗事件,导致在监测期间每10,000人年(p-年)发生19.3例IR。大多数病例发生在20-34岁的男性、非西班牙裔白人、陆军服役人员和初级士兵中。女性ir升高(25.0 / 10,000 p-年),最年轻(
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Venomous animal bites and stings in active component U.S. service members, 2008-2023.

Venomous animal bites and stings in active component U.S. service members, 2008-2023.

Venomous animal bites and stings in active component U.S. service members, 2008-2023.

Venomous animal bites and stings in active component U.S. service members, 2008-2023.

This study characterizes all medically diagnosed bites and stings in active component service members (ACSMs) from snakes, venomous fish, other venomous marine animals, arthropods, and insects identified through an evaluation of medical data from the Defense Medical Surveillance System (DMSS). Incident trends were determined from 2008 through 2023, and incidence rates (IRs) and incidence rate ratios (IRRs) were calculated. In total, there were 42,552 venomous bite and sting medical encounters among 39,201 ACSMs, resulting in an IR of 19.3 cases per 10,000 person-years (p-yrs) during the surveillance period. Most cases occurred in men ages 20-34 years, non-Hispanic White individuals, Army service members, and junior enlisted ranks. IRs were elevated in female (25.0 per 10,000 p-yrs), youngest (<20 years, 24.5 per 10,000 p-yrs), and Coast Guard or U.S. Public Health Service (23.4 per 10,000 p-yrs) ACSMs. Arthropods were the primary source (75.0%) of stings and bites. IRR calculations suggest that women had a 37.0% higher risk than men. These study findings demonstrate the continuing susceptibility of ACSMs to venomous encounters and the importance of targeted prevention strategies, training, and comprehensive medical support to maintain force readiness. Venomous bites and stings are a persistent health concern for active component service members. Arthropods are the most common culprit, but risks vary by sex, age, and military occupation. This report also reveals that younger service members and women are disproportionately affected.

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来源期刊
MSMR
MSMR Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
2.30
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