Envenoming Snakebite Risk Map for Sri Lanka
Ediriweera, D.; Kasturiratne, A.; Pathmeswaran, A.; Pathmeswaran, A.; Gunawardena, N.; Jayamanne, S.; Wijayawickrama, B.; Isbister, G.; Giorgi, A.D.E.; Diggle, P.; Lalloo, D.; de Silva, J.
Citation:
Ediriweera, D., Kasturiratne, A., Pathmeswaran, A., Gunawardena, N., Jayamanne, S., Wijayawickrama, B., Isbister, G., Giorgi, A.D.E., Diggle, P., Lalloo, D. and de Silva, J. 2016. Envenoming Snakebite Risk Map for Sri Lanka. In proceedings of the 17th Conference on Postgraduate Research, International Postgraduate Research Conference 2016, Faculty of Graduate Studies, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. p 129.
Date:
2016
Abstract:
Snakebite is a neglected tropical disease. Hospital based statistics often underestimate snakebite
incidence because a significant proportion of victims seek traditional treatments. Since
geospatial risk assessments of snakebite envenoming are rare, health care resources are
distributed based on administrative boundaries rather than on a need analysis.
The aim of the study was to develop a snakebite envenoming risk map for Sri Lanka.
Epidemiological data was obtained from a community-based island-wide survey. The sample
was distributed equally among the nine provinces. 165,665 participants living in 1118 Grama
Niladhari divisions were surveyed. Model-based geostatistics was used to determine the
geographical distribution of envenoming bite incidence. The Monte Carlo maximum likelihood
method was used to obtain parameter estimates and plug-in spatial predictions of risk. A
predictive model was developed with natural and social environmental variables to construct an
estimated envenoming bite incidence map and a probability contour map (PCM) to demonstrate
the spatial variation in the predictive probability that local incidence does or does not exceed
national envenoming snakebite incidence (i.e. 151 per 100,000).
Envenoming bite incidence had a positive association with elevation up to 195 meters above
sea level, with incidence dropping at higher elevations. The incidence of envenoming was
higher in the dry zone compared to intermediate and wet climatic zones and decreased with
increasing population density. Developed risk maps showed substantial within-country spatial
variation in envenoming bites. Conclusion:
The risk maps provide useful information for healthcare decision makers to allocate resources
to manage snakebite envenoming in Sri Lanka. We used replicable methods which can be
adapted to other geographic regions after re-estimating spatial covariance parameters for each
region of interest.
Show full item record