Schermann H, Eiges N, Sabag A, Kazum E, Albagli A, Salai M, Shlaifer A
J Spec Oper Med. 2017 Fall;17(3):51-54. doi: 10.55460/2F8X-FNZF.
Soldiers serving in the Israel Defense Force Military Working Dogs (MWD) Unit spend many hours taming dogs' special skills, taking them on combat missions, and performing various dogkeeping activities. During this intensive work with the aggressive military dogs, bites are common, and some of them result in permanent disability. However, this phenomenon has not been quantified or reported as an occupational hazard.
This was a retrospective cohort study based on self-administered questionnaires. Information was collected about soldiers' baseline demographics, duration of the experience of working with dogs, total number of bites they had, circumstances of bite events, and complications and medical treatment of each bite. Bite risk was quantified by incidence, mean time to first bite, and a Cox proportional hazards model. Rates of complications and the medical burden of bites were compared between combat soldiers and noncombat dogkeepers. Bite locations were presented graphically.
Seventy-eight soldiers participated and reported on 139 bites. Mean time of working with dogs was 16 months (standard deviation, ±9.4 months). Overall bite incidence was 11 bites per 100 person-months; the mean time to first bite event was 6.3 months. The Cox proportional hazards model showed that none of baseline characteristics significantly increased bite hazard. About 90% of bites occurred during routine activities, and 3.3% occurred on combat missions. Only in 9% of bite events did soldiers observed the safety precautions code. Bite complications included fractures, need for intravenous antibiotic treatment and surgical repair, prominent scarring, diminished sensation, and stiffness of proximal joints. Bite complications were similar between combat soldiers and dogkeepers. Most bites (57%) were located on hands and arms.
MWD bites are an occupational hazard resulting in significant medical burden. Hands and arms were most common bite locations. Observance of safety precautions may be the most appropriate first-line preventive intervention. Barrier protection of upper extremities may reduce bite severity and complication rates.
在以色列国防军军犬部队服役的士兵需要花费大量时间训练军犬的特殊技能,带它们执行战斗任务,并开展各种饲养工作。在与这些攻击性军犬进行高强度工作期间,咬伤情况很常见,其中一些导致了永久性残疾。然而,这一现象尚未被量化或作为职业危害进行报告。
这是一项基于自填问卷的回顾性队列研究。收集了有关士兵的基本人口统计学信息、与犬只工作的时长、被咬总数、咬伤事件的情况以及每次咬伤的并发症和治疗情况。通过发病率、首次被咬的平均时间以及Cox比例风险模型对咬伤风险进行量化。比较了战斗士兵和非战斗犬只饲养人员的并发症发生率和咬伤的医疗负担。以图表形式展示了咬伤部位。
78名士兵参与并报告了139次咬伤事件。与犬只工作的平均时长为16个月(标准差,±9.4个月)。总体咬伤发病率为每100人月11次咬伤;首次咬伤事件的平均时间为6.3个月。Cox比例风险模型显示,没有任何基线特征显著增加咬伤风险。约90%的咬伤发生在日常活动期间,3.3%发生在战斗任务中。只有9%的咬伤事件中士兵遵守了安全预防措施规定。咬伤并发症包括骨折、需要静脉注射抗生素治疗和手术修复、明显的疤痕、感觉减退以及近端关节僵硬。战斗士兵和犬只饲养人员的咬伤并发症相似。大多数咬伤(57%)位于手部和手臂。
军犬咬伤是一种职业危害,会导致重大的医疗负担。手部和手臂是最常见的咬伤部位。遵守安全预防措施可能是最恰当的一线预防干预措施。对上肢进行屏障保护可能会降低咬伤的严重程度和并发症发生率。