Addressing the global snakebite crisis with geo-spatial analyses – Recent advances and future direction

Pintor, Anna F.V., Ray, Nicolas, Longbottom, Joshua, Bravo-Vega, Carlos A., Yousefi, Masoud, Murray, Kris A., Ediriweera, Dileepa S., and Diggle, Peter J. (2021) Addressing the global snakebite crisis with geo-spatial analyses – Recent advances and future direction. Toxicon: X, 11. 100076.

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Abstract

Venomous snakebite is a neglected tropical disease that annually leads to hundreds of thousands of deaths or long-term physical and mental ailments across the developing world. Insufficient data on spatial variation in snakebite risk, incidence, human vulnerability, and accessibility of medical treatment contribute substantially to ineffective on-ground management. There is an urgent need to collect data, fill knowledge gaps and address on-ground management problems. The use of novel, and transdisciplinary approaches that take advantage of recent advances in spatio-temporal models, ‘big data’, high performance computing, and fine-scale spatial information can add value to snakebite management by strategically improving our understanding and mitigation capacity of snakebite. We review the background and recent advances on the topic of snakebite related geospatial analyses and suggest avenues for priority research that will have practical on-ground applications for snakebite management and mitigation. These include streamlined, targeted data collection on snake distributions, snakebites, envenomings, venom composition, health infrastructure, and antivenom accessibility along with fine-scale models of spatio-temporal variation in snakebite risk and incidence, intraspecific venom variation, and environmental change modifying human exposure. These measures could improve and ‘future-proof’ antivenom production methods, antivenom distribution and stockpiling systems, and human-wildlife conflict management practices, while simultaneously feeding into research on venom evolution, snake taxonomy, ecology, biogeography, and conservation.

Item ID: 70147
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 2590-1710
Keywords: Envenomings, Medically relevant snakes, Neglected tropical diseases, Snakebite incidence, Spatio-temporal epidemiology, Species distribution models
Copyright Information: © 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND IGO license.
Date Deposited: 22 Apr 2022 03:27
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