Durand Jonas, Bournez Laure, Marchand Julien, Schmid Claire, Carravieri Irene, Palin Béatrice, Galley Cyril, Godard Vincent, Brun-Jacob Annick, Cosson Jean-François, Frey-Klett Pascale
Tous Chercheurs Laboratory, UMR 1136 'Interactions Arbres Micro-Organismes', INRAE-Lorraine University, Centre INRAE Grand Est-Nancy, F-54280 Champenoux, France.
Nancy Laboratory for Rabies and Wildlife, The French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety (ANSES), F-54220 Malzéville, France.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Mar 18;18(6):3161. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18063161.
Mass-participation events in temperate forests are now well-established features of outdoor activities and represent high-risk activities regarding human exposition to tick bites. In this study we used a citizen science approach to quantify the space-time frequency of tick bites and undetected tick bites among orienteers that participated in a 6-day orienteering competition that took place in July 2018 in the forests of Eastern France, and we looked at the use and efficacy of different preventive behaviors. Our study confirms that orienteers are a high-risk population for tick bites, with 62.4% of orienteers bitten at least once during the competition, and 2.4 to 12.1 orienteers per 100 orienteers were bitten by ticks when walking 1 km. In addition, 16.7% of orienteers bitten by ticks had engorged ticks, meaning that they did not detect and remove their ticks immediately after the run. Further, only 8.5% of orienteers systematically used a repellent, and the use of repellent only partially reduced the probability of being bitten by ticks. These results represent the first attempt to quantify the risk of not immediately detecting a tick bite and provide rare quantitative data on the frequency of tick bites for orienteers according to walking distance and time spent in the forest. The results also provide information on the use of repellent, which will be very helpful for modeling risk assessment. The study also shows that prevention should be increased for orienteers in France.
在温带森林中举行的大规模参与性活动如今已成为户外活动的既定特色,且就人类接触蜱虫叮咬而言属于高风险活动。在本研究中,我们采用公民科学方法,对参与2018年7月在法国东部森林举行的一场为期6天的定向越野比赛的定向运动员中蜱虫叮咬及未被发现的蜱虫叮咬的时空频率进行量化,并研究不同预防行为的使用情况及效果。我们的研究证实,定向运动员是蜱虫叮咬的高风险人群,62.4%的定向运动员在比赛期间至少被叮咬过一次,每100名定向运动员中,行走1公里时有2.4至12.1人被蜱虫叮咬。此外,16.7%被蜱虫叮咬的定向运动员身上的蜱虫已饱食,这意味着他们在跑完后并未立即发现并清除蜱虫。此外,只有8.5%的定向运动员系统性地使用了驱虫剂,且使用驱虫剂仅部分降低了被蜱虫叮咬的概率。这些结果代表了首次尝试量化未立即发现蜱虫叮咬的风险,并提供了关于定向运动员按行走距离和在森林中花费时间的蜱虫叮咬频率的罕见定量数据。研究结果还提供了关于驱虫剂使用的信息,这对风险评估建模将非常有帮助。该研究还表明,法国的定向运动员应加强预防措施。