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295 A study on the epidemiological profile and treatment-seeking pattern of snakebite patients in two rural communities of Bangladesh: findings from a community trial
  1. Chowdhury Farheen1,
  2. AKM Fazlur Rahman1,
  3. MA Faiz1,
  4. Salim Mahmud Chowdhury2
  1. 1Centre for Injury Prevention and Research Bangladesh
  2. 2Toxicology Society of Bangladesh

Abstract

Background Snakebite is a neglected public health issue in the rural tropics. In Bangladesh, rural communities account for 95% of snakebite incidents. Care seekers bear a significant financial burden when diagnosis and treatment are delayed.

Objective The study aimed to determine the snakebite incidence and associated health-seeking behaviors in two rural communities in Bangladesh.

Methodology A community-based survey was conducted among thirty thousand households in the Shibganj upazilla of Chapainawabganj district and the Kalapara upazilla of Patuakhali district using a multistage cluster sampling method. A closed-ended questionnaire was used to conduct the face-to-face interview. Descriptive analysis was performed to examine the snakebite victim’s characteristics and care-seeking pattern.

Result The overall snakebite incidence was 174 bites per 100,000 population. The mean age of the patients was 35±14.9 years. Males represented 73.2% of the 231 cases. Approximately two-fifths of the victims were farmers or fishermen. A little over half of the incidence occurred in the agricultural fields or in the river or sea. Snakebites were most common during the wet season (50.6%). Meanwhile, the majority (87.4%) sought immediate first-aid measures. Moreover, a vast majority (82.7%) used a tourniquet above the bite site as a first aid measure. Only 16.9% of patients sought treatment from a healthcare facility; the remainder (69.3%) went to a traditional healer. For snake bite victims who reached the hospital directly, 59% arrived within 1–2 hours of the incident, while for those who visited a traditional healer, the median time was 30 minutes (IQR: 60–25 minutes). However, 15.2% of individuals who had previously seen a traditional healer also sought treatment from a healthcare facility for the second time. The overall median travel time from the bite site to visiting a traditional healer and then to the hospital was 120 minutes (IQR: 210–90 minutes). Furthermore, 51.2% of patients undertook treatment at the primary care facility. We also discovered that three-fifths of victims had a sense of belief that the traditional healers could only provide the successful treatment.

Conclusion Snakebite outcomes and treatment-seeking behaviors remain complicated in rural Bangladesh. Thus, substantial health education campaigns may aid in reducing snakebite-related morbidity and mortality.

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