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WHO: Global Impact of Snake Bites Need to be Halved by 2030

by Rishika Gupta on February 24, 2019 at 7:13 PM

A new strategy has been devised by World Health Organization (WHO) to bring down the rate of snake bites cases down by 50 percent by 2030.


University of Melbourne snakebite expert David Williams, who heads the Australian Venom Research Unit, has played a vital role in developing the strategy in his position as Chair of the WHO's Snakebite Envenoming Working Group.

‘Measures have been taken to prevent snake bites which affect 5.4 million people globally each year and kills up to 138,000 people yearly.’

In India alone, snakes bite more than 2.8 million people each year, causing an estimated 46 000 deaths. In Africa, snakebite kills about 32 000 people annually and leaves tens of thousands more with permanent disabilities.

The WHO-led strategy is the first global plan to minimize snakebite's huge health and socio-economic cost. It aims to reduce the death and disability burden by 50 percent by 2030, through a comprehensive strategy that includes delivering up to three million effective snakebite treatments annually.

The strategy, outlined in a paper by Dr Williams and colleagues in the latest PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, aims to:

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