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Disease Risk Perception and Safety Practices: A Survey of Australian Flying Fox Rehabilitators

机译:疾病风险感知和安全实践:对澳大利亚飞狐康复者的调查

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摘要

Interactions with flying foxes pose disease transmission risks to volunteer rehabilitators (carers) who treat injured, ill, and orphaned bats. In particular, Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV) can be transmitted directly from flying foxes to humans in Australia. Personal protective equipment (PPE) and rabies vaccination can be used to protect against lyssavirus infection. During May and June 2014, active Australian flying fox carers participated in an online survey (SOAR: Survey Of Australian flying fox Rehabilitators) designed to gather demographic data, assess perceptions of disease risk, and explore safety practices. Responses to open-ended questions were analysed thematically. A logistic regression was performed to assess whether rehabilitators’ gender, use of PPE, threat perception, and years of experience predicted variation in their odds of being bitten or scratched. Eligible responses were received from 122 rehabilitators located predominantly on the eastern coast of Australia. Eighty-four percent of respondents were female. Years of experience ranged from <1 to 30 years (median 5 years). Respondents were highly educated. All rehabilitators were vaccinated against rabies and 94% received a rabies titre check at least every two years. Sixty-three percent of carers did not perceive viruses in flying foxes as a potential threat to their health, yet 74% of carers reported using PPE when handling flying foxes. Eighty-three percent of rehabilitators had received a flying fox bite or scratch at some point during their career. Carers provide an important community service by rescuing and rehabilitating flying foxes. While rehabilitators in this study have many excellent safety practices, including a 100% vaccination rate against rabies, there is room for improvement in PPE use. We recommend 1) the establishment of an Australia-wide set of guidelines for safety when caring for bats and 2) that the responsible government agencies in Australia support carers who rescue potentially ABLV-infected bats by offering compensation for PPE.
机译:与果蝠的相互作用给治疗受伤,生病和孤立的蝙蝠的志愿者康复者(看护者)带来了疾病传播的风险。特别是,澳大利亚蝙蝠狂犬病病毒(ABLV)可以从狐狸直接传播给澳大利亚的人类。个人防护设备(PPE)和狂犬病疫苗接种可用于预防狂犬病病毒感染。在2014年5月至6月期间,活跃的澳大利亚果蝇护理人员参加了一项在线调查(SOAR:澳大利亚果蝇康复者调查),旨在收集人口统计数据,评估对疾病风险的看法并探讨安全做法。对开放式问题的回答进行了主题分析。进行了逻辑回归分析,以评估康复者的性别,PPE的使用,威胁感知以及多年的经验是否可以预测其被咬或抓伤的几率。从主要位于澳大利亚东海岸的122名康复者收到了合格的回复。 84%的受访者是女性。经验年限从<1到30年(中位数5年)不等。受访者受过良好的教育。所有康复者都接种了狂犬病疫苗,94%的患者至少每两年接受一次狂犬病滴度检查。百分之六十三的看护者没有将狐狸中的病毒视为对其健康的潜在威胁,但是有74%的看护者表示在处理狐狸时使用了PPE。百分之八十三的康复者在其职业生涯的某个时候受到过飞狐叮咬或抓挠。照料者通过救助和修复果蝇来提供重要的社区服务。尽管这项研究中的康复者拥有许多出色的安全实践,包括针对狂犬病的100%疫苗接种率,但PPE使用仍有改善的空间。我们建议1)建立一套澳大利亚范围内的护理蝙蝠时的安全性准则,以及2)澳大利亚负责任的政府机构通过提供PPE补偿,为照顾可能感染ABLV的蝙蝠的看护者提供支持。

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