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Prevalence, Circumstances, and Management of Acute Pesticide Poisoning in Hospitals in Kampala City, Uganda

Authors :
Erik Jørs
Victoria Nabankema
Abdullah Ali Halage
Massy Moses Kasule
Ruth Mubeezi Neebye
Charles Ssemugabo
Deogratius Ssekimpi
Source :
Ssemugabo, C, Ali Halage, A, Mubeezi Neebye, R, Nabankema, V, Kasule, M M, Ssekimpi, D & Jørs, E 2017, ' Prevalence, Circumstances, and Management of Acute Pesticide Poisoning in Hospitals in Kampala City, Uganda ', Environmental Health Insights, vol. 11, 1178630217728924 . https://doi.org/10.1177/1178630217728924, Environmental Health Insights, Vol 11 (2017), Environmental Health Insights
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

This study was aimed at assessing prevalence, circumstance, and management of acute pesticide poisoning in hospitals in Kampala. It was a retrospective cross-sectional study that involved reviewing of 739 poisoning patient records from 5 hospitals in Kampala. Of the 739 patients, 212 were due to pesticide poisoning resulting in a prevalence of 28.8%. About 91.4% (191/210) of the cases were due to organophosphate poisoning, 63.3% (133/210) were intentional, and 98.1% (206/210) were exposed through ingestion. Diagnosis was majorly based on poisoning history 91.2% (187/205), and clinical features such as airways, breathing, and circulation examination 48.0% (95/198); nausea and vomiting 42.9% (91/212); muscle weakness 29.7% (63/212); excessive salivation 23.1% (49/212); and confusion 20.3% (43/212). More than half of the patients admitted were treated using atropine 52.3% (113/212). The prevalence of acute pesticide poisoning was high with most managed based on physical and clinical examination.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ssemugabo, C, Ali Halage, A, Mubeezi Neebye, R, Nabankema, V, Kasule, M M, Ssekimpi, D & Jørs, E 2017, ' Prevalence, Circumstances, and Management of Acute Pesticide Poisoning in Hospitals in Kampala City, Uganda ', Environmental Health Insights, vol. 11, 1178630217728924 . https://doi.org/10.1177/1178630217728924, Environmental Health Insights, Vol 11 (2017), Environmental Health Insights
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....626e21c9c6fb1926b09e08ea0796fa19