Abstract

Simple SummaryDog bites are a major public health problem throughout the world. The different types of information sources that exist in relation to this issue are influencing decision making to control and prevent these incidents. For this reason, the present study aims to compare the main variables of interest in the publications of dog bite accidents in the written and grey press and scientific literature in Chile and Spain, between 2013 and 2017. The results showed that sensationalist variables in dog bite articles are reported more frequently in the press literature compared to the indexed and grey literature. Examples of these variables are involvement of potentially dangerous breeds, articles with death reports, among others. In conclusion, an improvement in the quality of the information that reaches the population about dog bites could be achieved through better and more fluid communication between scientists and journalists who publish on this topic.Dog bites are a major public health problem, with consequences such as physical injury, psychological trauma, transmission of zoonoses, infections, and economic costs. For this reason, it is necessary to develop preventive programs, which require quality information to support the authorities’ decision-making and to raise public awareness about the application of the proposed measures. The objective of this review was to analyze the press, indexed and gray dog bite literature published during the 2013–2017 period. During that period, 385 articles from three sources of information were analyzed: Press literature, scientific literature, and gray literature. Of these, the greatest amount of information corresponding to the context and the aggressor animal was found in the press literature, where it was recorded that the greatest number of records reported in the Chilean articles were caused by potentially dangerous breeds (87.50%), having significant differences with the gray literature (p = 0.030), and in Spain, the greatest number of attacks was also made by potentially dangerous dogs 91.30% (21/23), statistically significant differences with the gray literature (p = 0.002) and with the indexed (p < 0.001). In the case of the scientific and gray literature, the greatest amount of information was found about the victim of the attack and the treatments applied to them. In these cases, the highest percentage of victims included in the reports contained both sexes for the two literatures (44.62% and 87.71%, respectively). Regarding the treatment applied, in the scientific literature in most of the reports, the patients received washings, rabies vaccine, and tetanus vaccine (46.26%) and presented significant differences in Chile with the information contained in the gray literature (p = 0.023), in Spain with the gray (p = 0.017) and with the press (p = 0.023). In conclusion, the press literature differs in multiple variables with the information reported in the scientific literature and, in some cases, with the gray literature. The reason why the material that is being distributed to the population would not coincide in multiple relevant variables in other literature and the representative reality of the problem is the basis for this topic.

Highlights

  • Accidents due to animal bites are an important national and international public health problem, both due to their frequency and their health care requirements, affecting children and adults regardless of socioeconomic status [1]

  • We identified and analyzed the main variables of interest related to the general characteristics of the publication, characteristics of the person bitten (Table 4), characteristics of the biting animal (Table 5), context of the attack and lesions-treatment produced by the canine bites

  • Regarding the general characteristics of the publications, 100% (91/91) of the press literature consisted of articles focused on dog bites only

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Summary

Introduction

Accidents due to animal bites are an important national and international public health problem, both due to their frequency and their health care requirements, affecting children and adults regardless of socioeconomic status [1]. As a result of canine bites, important consequences arise, among which are physical injuries, psychological trauma, transmission of zoonoses [8], infections after bites [9,10], and economic costs, both for the state and the victim, who may require medical attention and reconstructive procedures [11]. The consequences derived from bites vary according to factors related to the characteristics of the aggressor animal and the affected person, generating injuries of varying severity [1] that impact the physical [12,13] and psychological [14]

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