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​Tough call: On India and snakebites

27 Apr 2026
2 min

Snakebite Management Challenges in Kerala

Kerala faces a significant challenge in managing snakebites due to various factors including climate, snake behavior, and health infrastructure limitations.

Factors Contributing to Snakebite Incidents

  • Ectothermic Nature of Snakes: Snakes seek cool, damp places during hotter summers, often leading them into human habitats.
  • Dense Vegetation and Human-Wildlife Overlap: The state's environment increases the likelihood of human-snake interactions.
  • Pre-Monsoon Breeding Season: Snakes are more active and defensive during this period, increasing the risk of bites.

Current Challenges in Healthcare Response

  • Non-Venomous and Dry Bites: About 70% of snakebite cases involve non-venomous snakes, and many venomous bites are dry, reducing the need for ASV.
  • Adverse Reactions to ASV: Unnecessary administration of ASV can lead to anaphylactic reactions, which can be fatal.
  • Lack of Diagnostic Tools: No commercial diagnostic kit exists in India to detect venom in blood; diagnosis relies on symptoms, which may appear after tissue damage.
  • Infrastructure Shortcomings:
    1. Scarce ICU beds and ventilator backups.
    2. Inadequate training in managing anaphylaxis.
    3. Limited lab support for monitoring patient conditions.

Efforts and Recommendations

  • Government Initiatives: Kerala has made snakebite a notifiable disease and launched the 'SARPA' program for snake rescue and public awareness.
  • Need for Rapid Diagnostic Tools: Experts recommend developing rapid venom detection diagnostics to address the syndromic approach's risks.
  • Improving Medical Infrastructure: Enhance hospital capacity and training to better manage snakebite cases.

Kerala's approach is prevention-heavy, but there is a need to strengthen the curative measures to address the challenges posed by snakebites effectively.

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SARPA

An initiative in Kerala aimed at snake rescue and public awareness regarding snakebite prevention and management.

Notifiable disease

A disease that, by law, must be reported to government or public health authorities. Making snakebite a notifiable disease helps in tracking incidence, understanding trends, and allocating resources.

Syndromic approach

A method of diagnosis that relies on observing a cluster of symptoms rather than definitive laboratory tests. In snakebite management, it means treating based on symptoms, which can lead to unnecessary ASV use.

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