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Journal Article

Citation

De Klerk P, van Dijk M, Van As AB. S. Afr. Med. J. 2016; 106(2): 206-209.

Affiliation

Department of Pediatric Surgery, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, Netherlands. peterdeklerk@live.nl.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, South African Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

26821905

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Animal bites are a major cause of preventable traumatic injuries.

OBJECTIVES: To provide more epidemiological information on animal bites, and assist in increasing awareness of the problem.

METHODS: A retrospective chart review was performed including children aged >13 years presenting with bite injuries (excluding dog and human bites) to the trauma unit at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa, over a 25-year period.

RESULTS: Two hundred and thirteen children were eligible to be entered into the study. The median age was 2.9 years (range 1.2 - 6.5), with boys slightly predominating (54.9%). Most (74.6%) of the bite injuries were inflicted by mammals, the majority (64.8) of mammalian bites being rat bites. The proportions of boys and girls in the age group 0 - 4 years bitten by rats significantly differed from the proportions in the age group >4 years (p=0.039). In the age group 0 - 4 years more girls suffered rat bites, while more boys were bitten in the age group >4 years. Of 91 rat bites, 81 (89.0%) occurred inside the house. The hands (43.9%) and the head/face/neck region (39.0%) were most affected. The underdeveloped suburbs of Philippi, Gugulethu and Khayelitsha in Cape Town represented a disproportionate number (41.6%) of rat bites.

CONCLUSION: There is a relationship between poverty, unemployment, poor housing, informal settlements and rodent infestation. These high-risk populations need to be the target for government rat eradication programmes.


Language: en

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