Characterization of patients with a snakebite presenting to healthcare facilities and reported to poison and drug information centers-Arizona, 2017-2021.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 TOXICOLOGY Clinical Toxicology Pub Date : 2024-09-24 DOI:10.1080/15563650.2024.2402937
Cedar L Mitchell, Geoffrey Smelski, Kim Schmid, Maureen Roland, Matthew Christenberry, Katherine D Ellingson, Daniel E Brooks, Kenneth Komatsu, Steven Dudley, Farshad Shirazi, Theresa A Cullen
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Abstract

Introduction: Envenomation after a North American rattlesnake (Crotalus spp. and Sistrusus spp.) bite is associated with substantial morbidity. Arizona reports the highest number of rattlesnake envenomations annually in the United States. We evaluated the performance of poison and drug information centers for snakebite surveillance, compared with the hospital and emergency department discharge database. We used both datasets to improve the characterization of epidemiology, healthcare costs, and clinical effects of snakebite envenomations in Arizona.

Methods: We identified patients with a snakebite during 2017-2021 using Arizona hospital and emergency department discharge data and snakebite consults with two regional Arizona poison centers. Patients were matched using name and birthdate. The performance of poison center data for snakebite surveillance was evaluated using the percentage of snakebite patients in hospital and emergency department discharge data that consulted with poison centers. Patient demographics, healthcare characteristics, clinical effects, and context of snakebite events were described using both datasets.

Results: In total, 1,288 patients with a snakebite were identified using the Arizona hospital and emergency department discharge data, which resulted in 953 (74%) consultations with poison centers. The median age of patients was 48 years (IQR 28-62 years), and they were predominantly male (66%), White (90%), and non-Hispanic (84%). The median billed charges were US$ 84,880 (IQR US$ 13,286-US$ 168,043); the median duration of a healthcare stay was 34 h (IQR 13-48 h), and 29% of patients were transferred between healthcare facilities. Among 953 consulted poison center calls for a snakebite, a median of 14 vials of antivenom was administered per patient; 375 (60%) bites occurred near the home, and 345 (43%) patients were bitten on a lower extremity. One death was identified.

Discussion: Snakebites in Arizona can cause severe morbidity and require extensive healthcare resources for treatment. Poison centers are valuable for monitoring venomous snakebites in Arizona.

Conclusions: Using hospital and emergency department discharge data with poison center records can improve public health surveillance data regarding snakebite epidemiology and human-snake interaction information and be used to tailor interventions to increase awareness of snake encounters and prevent snakebites.

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2017-2021 年亚利桑那州到医疗机构就诊并向毒物和药物信息中心报告的蛇咬伤患者特征。
导言:被北美响尾蛇(Crotalus spp.亚利桑那州是美国每年响尾蛇咬伤人数最多的地区。与医院和急诊科出院数据库相比,我们评估了毒物和药物信息中心在蛇咬伤监测方面的表现。我们利用这两个数据集来改进亚利桑那州蛇咬伤的流行病学特征、医疗成本和临床效果:我们利用亚利桑那州医院和急诊科的出院数据以及亚利桑那州两个地区毒物中心的蛇咬伤咨询,确定了 2017-2021 年期间的蛇咬伤患者。患者通过姓名和出生日期进行匹配。利用医院和急诊科出院数据中向毒物中心咨询的蛇咬伤患者比例,评估毒物中心数据在蛇咬伤监测方面的性能。利用这两个数据集对患者的人口统计学特征、医疗保健特征、临床效果和蛇咬伤事件的背景进行了描述:利用亚利桑那州医院和急诊科的出院数据共确定了 1288 名被蛇咬伤的患者,其中 953 人(74%)曾向毒物中心咨询。患者年龄中位数为 48 岁(IQR 28-62 岁),主要为男性(66%)、白人(90%)和非西班牙裔(84%)。收费中位数为84,880美元(IQR为13,286-168,043美元);住院时间中位数为34小时(IQR为13-48小时),29%的患者在医疗机构之间转诊。在 953 个毒物中心接到的蛇咬伤咨询电话中,每位患者使用的抗蛇毒血清中位数为 14 瓶;375 例(60%)咬伤发生在住家附近,345 例(43%)患者的下肢被咬伤。发现一例死亡病例:讨论:亚利桑那州的蛇咬伤可导致严重的发病率,需要大量的医疗资源进行治疗。毒物中心对亚利桑那州毒蛇咬伤的监测很有价值:利用医院和急诊科的出院数据以及毒物中心的记录可以改善有关蛇咬伤流行病学和人蛇互动信息的公共卫生监测数据,并可用于定制干预措施,以提高人们对遇到蛇的认识并预防蛇咬伤。
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
Clinical Toxicology
Clinical Toxicology 医学-毒理学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
12.10%
发文量
148
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: clinical Toxicology publishes peer-reviewed scientific research and clinical advances in clinical toxicology. The journal reflects the professional concerns and best scientific judgment of its sponsors, the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology, the European Association of Poisons Centres and Clinical Toxicologists, the American Association of Poison Control Centers and the Asia Pacific Association of Medical Toxicology and, as such, is the leading international journal in the specialty.
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