Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX
The relationship between northern Indigenous people and dogs has evolved over the past years alongside events such as colonization, settlement, proliferation of snowmobiling and other socio-cultural and environmental changes. These changes have had negative impacts on this relationship, and with the...
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ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/19614771 2023-05-15T14:31:14+02:00 Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX Laurence Daigle Léa Delesalle André Ravel Barrie Ford Cécile Aenishaenslin 2022-04-19T11:28:55Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.777640.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Occurrence_and_Risk_Factors_of_Dog_Bites_in_Northern_Indigenous_Communities_A_Scoping_Review_DOCX/19614771 unknown doi:10.3389/fvets.2022.777640.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Occurrence_and_Risk_Factors_of_Dog_Bites_in_Northern_Indigenous_Communities_A_Scoping_Review_DOCX/19614771 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Animal Systematics and Taxonomy Animal Physiology - Biophysics Animal Physiology - Cell Animal Physiology - Systems Animal Behaviour Animal Cell and Molecular Biology Animal Developmental and Reproductive Biology Animal Immunology Animal Neurobiology Animal Physiological Ecology Animal Structure and Function Veterinary Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology Veterinary Diagnosis and Diagnostics Veterinary Epidemiology Veterinary Immunology Veterinary Medicine Veterinary Microbiology (excl. Virology) Veterinary Parasitology Veterinary Pathology Veterinary Pharmacology Veterinary Surgery Veterinary Virology Veterinary Sciences not elsewhere classified scoping review dog bites epidemiology Indigenous northern communities Dataset 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.777640.s001 2022-04-20T23:03:46Z The relationship between northern Indigenous people and dogs has evolved over the past years alongside events such as colonization, settlement, proliferation of snowmobiling and other socio-cultural and environmental changes. These changes have had negative impacts on this relationship, and with the endemic presence of arctic fox rabies, dog bites have become an important public health burden. The objective of this study was to synthesize the state of knowledge regarding the occurrence of dog bites and associated risk factors in the specific context of northern Indigenous communities. A scoping review was conducted in seven bibliographic databases, from June 2018 to May 2020. From this search, 257 original studies were identified and eight papers were included for final analysis. Annual occurrence of dog bites in northern Indigenous communities ranged from 0.61 to 59.6/10,000 inhabitants. Dog bites affected 27–62.9% of the population in those regions during their lifetime. Very few studies compared the occurrence of dog bites between people living in northern communities with other populations or settings, but available evidence suggests that Indigenous people living in northern communities are at higher risk of dog bites than the rest of the population. Several individual and environmental risk factors were identified in the selected studies, although the strength of evidence varied significantly. Age (children) and gender (male) were well documented individual risk factors. Other factors, such as organizational barriers to dog management and lack of access to veterinary services, were identified and discussed by several authors. The results of this study support concerns about the higher risk of bites in northern Indigenous communities, and underscore the urgent need for more research into the contextual and environmental factors that impact the mitigation of these risks. Dataset Arctic Fox Arctic Frontiers: Figshare Arctic |
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Frontiers: Figshare |
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ftfrontimediafig |
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topic |
Animal Systematics and Taxonomy Animal Physiology - Biophysics Animal Physiology - Cell Animal Physiology - Systems Animal Behaviour Animal Cell and Molecular Biology Animal Developmental and Reproductive Biology Animal Immunology Animal Neurobiology Animal Physiological Ecology Animal Structure and Function Veterinary Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology Veterinary Diagnosis and Diagnostics Veterinary Epidemiology Veterinary Immunology Veterinary Medicine Veterinary Microbiology (excl. Virology) Veterinary Parasitology Veterinary Pathology Veterinary Pharmacology Veterinary Surgery Veterinary Virology Veterinary Sciences not elsewhere classified scoping review dog bites epidemiology Indigenous northern communities |
spellingShingle |
Animal Systematics and Taxonomy Animal Physiology - Biophysics Animal Physiology - Cell Animal Physiology - Systems Animal Behaviour Animal Cell and Molecular Biology Animal Developmental and Reproductive Biology Animal Immunology Animal Neurobiology Animal Physiological Ecology Animal Structure and Function Veterinary Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology Veterinary Diagnosis and Diagnostics Veterinary Epidemiology Veterinary Immunology Veterinary Medicine Veterinary Microbiology (excl. Virology) Veterinary Parasitology Veterinary Pathology Veterinary Pharmacology Veterinary Surgery Veterinary Virology Veterinary Sciences not elsewhere classified scoping review dog bites epidemiology Indigenous northern communities Laurence Daigle Léa Delesalle André Ravel Barrie Ford Cécile Aenishaenslin Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX |
topic_facet |
Animal Systematics and Taxonomy Animal Physiology - Biophysics Animal Physiology - Cell Animal Physiology - Systems Animal Behaviour Animal Cell and Molecular Biology Animal Developmental and Reproductive Biology Animal Immunology Animal Neurobiology Animal Physiological Ecology Animal Structure and Function Veterinary Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology Veterinary Diagnosis and Diagnostics Veterinary Epidemiology Veterinary Immunology Veterinary Medicine Veterinary Microbiology (excl. Virology) Veterinary Parasitology Veterinary Pathology Veterinary Pharmacology Veterinary Surgery Veterinary Virology Veterinary Sciences not elsewhere classified scoping review dog bites epidemiology Indigenous northern communities |
description |
The relationship between northern Indigenous people and dogs has evolved over the past years alongside events such as colonization, settlement, proliferation of snowmobiling and other socio-cultural and environmental changes. These changes have had negative impacts on this relationship, and with the endemic presence of arctic fox rabies, dog bites have become an important public health burden. The objective of this study was to synthesize the state of knowledge regarding the occurrence of dog bites and associated risk factors in the specific context of northern Indigenous communities. A scoping review was conducted in seven bibliographic databases, from June 2018 to May 2020. From this search, 257 original studies were identified and eight papers were included for final analysis. Annual occurrence of dog bites in northern Indigenous communities ranged from 0.61 to 59.6/10,000 inhabitants. Dog bites affected 27–62.9% of the population in those regions during their lifetime. Very few studies compared the occurrence of dog bites between people living in northern communities with other populations or settings, but available evidence suggests that Indigenous people living in northern communities are at higher risk of dog bites than the rest of the population. Several individual and environmental risk factors were identified in the selected studies, although the strength of evidence varied significantly. Age (children) and gender (male) were well documented individual risk factors. Other factors, such as organizational barriers to dog management and lack of access to veterinary services, were identified and discussed by several authors. The results of this study support concerns about the higher risk of bites in northern Indigenous communities, and underscore the urgent need for more research into the contextual and environmental factors that impact the mitigation of these risks. |
format |
Dataset |
author |
Laurence Daigle Léa Delesalle André Ravel Barrie Ford Cécile Aenishaenslin |
author_facet |
Laurence Daigle Léa Delesalle André Ravel Barrie Ford Cécile Aenishaenslin |
author_sort |
Laurence Daigle |
title |
Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX |
title_short |
Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX |
title_full |
Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX |
title_fullStr |
Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX |
title_full_unstemmed |
Table_1_Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review.DOCX |
title_sort |
table_1_occurrence and risk factors of dog bites in northern indigenous communities: a scoping review.docx |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.777640.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Occurrence_and_Risk_Factors_of_Dog_Bites_in_Northern_Indigenous_Communities_A_Scoping_Review_DOCX/19614771 |
geographic |
Arctic |
geographic_facet |
Arctic |
genre |
Arctic Fox Arctic |
genre_facet |
Arctic Fox Arctic |
op_relation |
doi:10.3389/fvets.2022.777640.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Occurrence_and_Risk_Factors_of_Dog_Bites_in_Northern_Indigenous_Communities_A_Scoping_Review_DOCX/19614771 |
op_rights |
CC BY 4.0 |
op_rightsnorm |
CC-BY |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.777640.s001 |
_version_ |
1766304913406558208 |