Global mortality of snakebite envenoming between 1990 and 2019
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-20, 00:08authored byNicholas LS Roberts, Emily K Johnson, Scott M Zeng, Erin B Hamilton, Amir Abdoli, Fares Alahdab, Vahid Alipour, Robert Ancuceanu, Catalina Liliana Andrei, Davood Anvari, Jalal Arabloo, Marcel Ausloos, Atalel Fentahun Awedew, Ashish D Badiye, Shankar M Bakkannavar, Ashish Bhalla, Nikha Bhardwaj, Pankaj Bhardwaj, Soumyadeep Bhaumik, Ali Bijani, Archith Boloor, Tianji Cai, Felix Carvalho, Dinh Toi Chu, Rosa AS Couto, Xiaochen Dai, Abebaw Alemayehu Desta, Hoa Thi Do, Lucas Earl, Aziz Eftekhari, Firooz Esmaeilzadeh, Farshad Farzadfar, Eduarda Fernandes, Irina Filip, Masoud Foroutan, Richard Charles Franklin, Abhay Motiramji Gaidhane, Birhan Gebresillassie Gebregiorgis, Berhe Gebremichael, Ahmad Ghashghaee, Mahaveer Golechha, Samer Hamidi, Syed Emdadul Haque, Khezar Hayat, Claudiu Herteliu, Olayinka Stephen Ilesanmi, M Mofizul Islam, Jagnoor Jagnoor, Tanuj Kanchan, Neeti Kapoor, Ejaz Ahmad Khan, Mahalaqua Nazli Khatib, Roba Khundkar, Kewal Krishan, G Anil Kumar, Nithin Kumar, Iván Landires, Stephen S Lim, Mohammed Madadin, Venkatesh Maled, Navid Manafi, Laurie B Marczak, Ritesh G Menezes, Tuomo J Meretoja, Ted R Miller, Abdollah Mohammadian-Hafshejani, Ali H Mokdad, Francis NP Monteiro, Maryam Moradi, Vinod C Nayak, Cuong Tat Nguyen, Huong Lan Thi Nguyen, Virginia Nuñez-Samudio, Samuel M Ostroff, Jagadish Rao Padubidri, Hai Quang Pham, Marina Pinheiro, Majid Pirestani, Zahiruddin Quazi Syed, Navid Rabiee, Amir Radfar, Vafa Rahimi-Movaghar, Sowmya J Rao, Prateek Rastogi, David Laith Rawaf, Salman Rawaf, Robert C Reiner, Amirhossein Sahebkar, Abdallah M Samy, Monika Sawhney, David C Schwebel, Subramanian Senthilkumaran, Masood Ali Shaikh, Valentin Yurievich Skryabin, Anna Aleksandrovna Skryabina, Amin Soheili, Mark StokesMark Stokes, Rekha Thapar, Marcos Roberto Tovani-Palone, Bach Xuan Tran, Ravensara S Travillian, Diana Zuleika Velazquez, Zhi Jiang Zhang, Mohsen Naghavi, Rakhi Dandona, Lalit Dandona, Spencer L James, David M Pigott, Christopher JL Murray, Simon I Hay, Theo Vos, Kanyin Liane Ong
AbstractSnakebite envenoming is an important cause of preventable death. The World Health Organization (WHO) set a goal to halve snakebite mortality by 2030. We used verbal autopsy and vital registration data to model the proportion of venomous animal deaths due to snakes by location, age, year, and sex, and applied these proportions to venomous animal contact mortality estimates from the Global Burden of Disease 2019 study. In 2019, 63,400 people (95% uncertainty interval 38,900–78,600) died globally from snakebites, which was equal to an age-standardized mortality rate (ASMR) of 0.8 deaths (0.5–1.0) per 100,000 and represents a 36% (2–49) decrease in ASMR since 1990. India had the greatest number of deaths in 2019, equal to an ASMR of 4.0 per 100,000 (2.3—5.0). We forecast mortality will continue to decline, but not sufficiently to meet WHO’s goals. Improved data collection should be prioritized to help target interventions, improve burden estimation, and monitor progress.