AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research on snakebite risk in Nepal shows that most studies have focused on small areas and human impacts, but this analysis expands on that using a national-scale survey and various environmental data.
  • The study emphasizes that poverty significantly increases snakebite risk for humans, making them 63.9 times more likely to be affected, while colder temperatures raise the risk for animals by 23.4 times.
  • The analysis identified risk hotspots across the Terai region, providing valuable insights that could inform similar studies and health interventions in other countries and for different diseases.

Article Abstract

Most efforts to understand snakebite burden in Nepal have been localized to relatively small areas and focused on humans through epidemiological studies. We present the outcomes of a geospatial analysis of the factors influencing snakebite risk in humans and animals, based on both a national-scale multi-cluster random survey and, environmental, climatic, and socio-economic gridded data for the Terai region of Nepal. The resulting Integrated Nested Laplace Approximation models highlight the importance of poverty as a fundamental risk-increasing factor, augmenting the snakebite odds in humans by 63.9 times. For animals, the minimum temperature of the coldest month was the most influential covariate, increasing the snakebite odds 23.4 times. Several risk hotspots were identified along the Terai, helping to visualize at multiple administrative levels the estimated population numbers exposed to different probability risk thresholds in 1 year. These analyses and findings could be replicable in other countries and for other diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8668914PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-03301-zDOI Listing

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