Nick Ballon/Wellcome Trust
Extracting snake venom
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Improving treatment for snakebite patients

WHO supports countries and regions to:

Build capacity for treatment:
Reducing the problem of snakebite envenoming begins by improving education about its risk and providing training to medical staff and health-care workers in affected countries.
WHO supports the development of standard treatment guidelines for medical professionals and health-care workers. WHO also participates in the creation of additional training resources for regions and countries adapted to service delivery environments and availability of local resources.

Provide early access to safe, affordable and effective antivenoms:
Improving access to antivenoms is essential to minimize morbidity and mortality and is a major component of WHO’s strategy to prevent and control snakebite envenoming. 
Antivenoms remain the only treatment available to prevent or reverse the effects of snakebite envenoming when administered early and in adequate therapeutic doses. They are included in WHO’s Model List of Essential Medicines.

Strengthen diagnostics tests and tools:
Developing new point-of-care diagnostic tools has considerable potential to enhance surveillance of snakebite envenoming by enabling retrospective identification in pathology samples of venom immunotypes from various species of snakes. 
Strengthened diagnostic tests and tools can improve the reporting of snakebite envenoming and assist in determining optimal antivenom needs for regions.

Raise awareness of snakebite rehabilitation:
Increasing awareness of snakebite envenoming as an important public health problem with organizations that work with disabled people in the developing world is essential to improving access and equity for victims. Snake bites can cause a variety of disabilities potentially leading to substantial loss of limb use or even amputation. In some countries victims become mired in poverty and may be socially ostracized. 

 

 

Snakebite - test

Currently, only one commercial diagnostic test available.

Up to 138 000 deaths

estimated per year

Almost 7400 people every day are bitten by snakes, and 220–380 people die as a result.

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400 000

snakebite envenoming victims left with permanent disabilities each year

Publications

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Target product profiles for animal plasma-derived antivenoms: antivenoms for treatment of snakebite envenoming in sub-Saharan Africa
We describe the first WHO public-benefit Target Product Profiles (TPPs) for snakebite antivenoms. We have focused initially on sub-Saharan Africa as there...
Interim report on snakebite incidence and case fatality rates in sub-Saharan Africa

The aim of the WHO strategy for the prevention and control of snakebite  envenoming is to reduce snakebite-related  mortality and disability...

Regional Action Plan for prevention and control of snakebite envenoming in the South-East Asia 2022–2030

More than 5.8 billion people globally are at risk of snakebite envenoming, which kills between 81 000 and 138 000 people per year. In the South-East...

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