this hardly effects us at all,
death by snakebite, but
globally, venomous snakebites kill roughly 100,000 people each year, mostly in
South Asia, Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, what
makes the treatment of a snake bite so difficult is that a different antivenom
must be developed and produced for each of the wildly different species of
venomous snakes all over the world, which is why the work of The Instituto Clodomiro Picado, or ICP, named after the father of Costa Rican
herpetology, is so important, it is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of snake antivenoms,
and the only one in Central America, photograph ICP, founded 50 years ago to save Costa Ricans from the dreaded
terciopelo, or the fer-de-lance snake that causes a terribly painful death with
one bite, the institute now serves the entire world, you can read how they do it at Smithsonian, it should be
remembered in some regions’ poorer corners, local capacities for antivenom
production are limited or nonexistent; the ICP has stepped in to help fill the
gaps. Beyond meeting its own country’s needs, the institute has supplied or
developed lifesaving antivenoms for victims on four continents, each treatment
customized to protect against species that still pose lethal threats, from the
West African carpet viper to the Papuan taipan, I knew that many people die of snake bite, but I had no idea that the number was as high as 100,000!
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