Wend Christopher M, Goolsby Craig, Schuler Keke, Fischer Steven T, Levy Matthew J
Emergency Medicine, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington DC, USA.
Department of Military & Emergency Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, USA.
Cureus. 2021 Mar 16;13(3):e13926. doi: 10.7759/cureus.13926.
Background Animal attacks pose a significant public health problem in the United States. Non-venomous animals are the leading cause of mortality in these attacks, and extremity injuries leading to hemorrhage are a common pattern. The Stop the Bleed campaign advocates for public training in bleeding control tactics and public access to bleeding control kits. Controlling life-threatening bleeding, as promoted by the Stop the Bleed campaign, may be a method to reduce preventable death in these attacks. Methodology We searched the Nexus Uni database, which compiles international news media articles, to collect newspaper articles in the United States between 2010 and 2019 that referenced animal attacks on humans in which a tourniquet was applied. We screened articles to assess for inclusion criteria and isolated a single report for each attack. Results A total of 50 individual attacks met the inclusion criteria and were included for data collection. Overall, 92% (n = 46) of the victims survived the attacks, and the average victim age was 33. California was the most common location of the attacks (n = 12, 24%), sharks caused the most attacks (n = 26, 52%), and victims most often sustained isolated extremity injuries (n = 24, 48% for arm and n = 24, 48% for leg). Laypeople applied the most tourniquets (n = 29, 58%), and appliers most frequently used improvised tourniquets (n = 30, 60%). Conclusions While mortality in this series was low, there are hundreds of fatalities from non-venomous animal attacks each year. Equipping and training the at-risk public to stop bleeding may save additional lives. Future Stop the Bleed efforts should improve access to public hemorrhage control equipment and expand educational outreach to people engaged in high-risk activities with animals.
在美国,动物袭击构成了一个重大的公共卫生问题。无毒动物是这些袭击中导致死亡的主要原因,而导致出血的肢体损伤是常见模式。“止血行动”倡导对公众进行出血控制策略培训,并让公众能够获得出血控制工具包。如“止血行动”所倡导的那样,控制危及生命的出血可能是减少这些袭击中可预防死亡的一种方法。
我们搜索了汇编国际新闻媒体文章的Nexus Uni数据库,以收集2010年至2019年间美国报纸上提及使用止血带的动物袭击人类的文章。我们筛选文章以评估纳入标准,并为每次袭击分离出一份单独的报告。
共有50起单独袭击符合纳入标准并被纳入数据收集。总体而言,92%(n = 46)的受害者在袭击中幸存下来,受害者的平均年龄为33岁。加利福尼亚是袭击最常见的地点(n = 12,24%),鲨鱼造成的袭击最多(n = 26,52%),受害者最常遭受孤立的肢体损伤(手臂n = 24,48%;腿部n = 24,48%)。非专业人员使用止血带的次数最多(n = 29,58%),使用止血带的人最常使用简易止血带(n = 30,60%)。
虽然本系列中的死亡率较低,但每年有数百人死于无毒动物袭击。为有风险的公众配备设备并进行止血培训可能会挽救更多生命。未来的“止血行动”应改善公众获得出血控制设备的机会,并将教育推广扩大到从事与动物相关高风险活动的人群。