Time delays in treatment of snakebite patients in rural Sri Lanka and the need for rapid diagnostic tests

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dc.contributor.author Silva, Anjana
dc.contributor.author Hlusicka, Jiri
dc.contributor.author Siribaddana, Nipuna
dc.contributor.author Waiddyanatha, Subodha
dc.contributor.author Pilapitiya, Senaka
dc.contributor.author Weerawansa, Prasanna
dc.contributor.author Lokunarangoda, Niroshan
dc.contributor.author Thalgaspitiya, Sujeewa
dc.contributor.author Siribaddana, Sisira
dc.contributor.author IsbisterI, Geoffrey.K
dc.date.accessioned 2022-12-20T07:00:01Z
dc.date.available 2022-12-20T07:00:01Z
dc.date.issued 2020-11-30
dc.identifier.citation Delays in treating snakebite in Sri Lanka en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.rjt.ac.lk/handle/123456789/5412
dc.description.abstract Delays in treatment seeking and antivenom administration remain problematic for snake envenoming. We aimed to describe the treatment seeking pattern and delays in admission to hospital and administration of antivenom in a cohort of authenticated snakebite patients. Adults (> 16 years), who presented with a confirmed snakebite from August 2013 to October 2014 were recruited from Anuradhapura Hospital. Demographic data, information on the cir cumstances of the bite, first aid, health-seeking behaviour, hospital admission, clinical fea tures, outcomes and antivenom treatment were documented prospectively. There were 742 snakebite patients [median age: 40 years (IQR:27–51; males: 476 (64%)]. One hundred and five (14%) patients intentionally delayed treatment by a median of 45min (IQR:20- 120min). Antivenom was administered a median of 230min (IQR:180–360min) post-bite, which didn’t differ between directly admitted and transferred patients; 21 (8%) receiving anti venom within 2h and 141 (55%) within 4h of the bite. However, transferred patients received antivenom sooner after admission to Anuradhapura hospital than those directly admitted (60min [IQR:30-120min] versus 120min [IQR:52-265min; p<0.0001]). A significantly greater proportion of transferred patients had features of systemic envenoming on admission com pared to those directly admitted (166/212 [78%] versus 5/43 [12%]; p<0.0001), and had pos itive clotting tests on admission (123/212 [58%] versus 10/43 [23%]; p<0.0001). Sri Lankan snakebite patients present early to hospital, but there remains a delay until antivenom administration. This delay reflects a delay in the appearance of observable or measurable features of envenoming and a lack of reliable early diagnostic tests. Improved early anti venom treatment will require reliable, rapid diagnostics for systemic envenoming. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.title Time delays in treatment of snakebite patients in rural Sri Lanka and the need for rapid diagnostic tests en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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