Innovation in action
My colleague Noon Makor, head of the health promotion team in Abyei, reports: “The use of the app in the project not only helps to identify snakes, but also makes it easier for the medical team to decide on the treatment of patients. For example, it can distinguish between venomous snakes such as the Egyptian cobra or the black mamba and harmless snakes such as the African house snake. This helps enormously to reduce the waste of valuable antivenoms.” Patients often receive the wrong treatment because the snake has not been correctly identified, or valuable antivenom is wasted on bites from non-venomous snakes, which can also cause serious side effects.
South Sudan has one of the lowest numbers of ecological studies on snakes, but also a high number of snake bites. Between May and October in particular, we admit many people to our hospitals with poisoning from snake bites. Last year, we treated 481 people in the two hospitals in Twic and Abyei due to a poisonous snakebite.
Part of the project is also to provide information about snakebites, for which the team uses radio spots, information events for the affected communities and organises interdisciplinary workshops for health personnel. “This improves knowledge about ecology, mapping and the diversity of snake species in the villages around Twic and the hospital in Abyei, and people learn how to react quickly and correctly to a snakebite,” reports Noon Makor. “We can see this, for example, in the fact that more people are coming to us for treatment of a snakebite. The long distance to hospitals is still a challenge - you really need to be treated very quickly after such a bite and if the nearest hospital is too far away and you don't have transport, it can be difficult - but compared to previous years, we are still seeing an improvement. People know more about what to do and that and where they can seek treatment. So our work is having an effect. There is also a kind of ambassador effect: the patients we treat return to their communities and report and actively contribute to improving knowledge about snakebites and getting people treated in time.”