| Literature DB >> 23718923 |
Omid Mehrpour1, Nasim Zamani, Jeffrey Brent, Mohammad Abdollahi.
Abstract
Poisoning morbidity and mortality is high in the developing world. Systems for care of poisoned patients differ markedly between countries. In this paper a comparison of two very different systems for the care of poisoned patients, is presented. Specifically, the role of poison centers and poison treatment centers in the US and Iran are contrasted. A systematic literature search was undertaken utilizing the PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar and the keywords "poison centers", "treatment" "Iran" "United States of America" and 100 publications were identified. From these, relevant data were found in 23 publications. The information was double-checked and data were summarized herein.We find that the system of the care of poisoned patients relies heavily on certified poison centers in the US and that only a few hospitals have well developed medical toxicology services. In contrast, in Iran, the poison center system is somehow less developed and the care of poisoned patients is provided in centralized high volume hospital poison units.Although both the US and Iran have highly developed systems for the care of poisoned patients they are distinctly different. Comparative studies based on these systems could provide important data for developing countries with more rudimentary poison control and treatment facilities.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23718923 PMCID: PMC3669081 DOI: 10.1186/2008-2231-21-42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Daru ISSN: 1560-8115 Impact factor: 3.117
Differences between the management options of the poisoned patients in Iran and US
| Poison control/information centers | Callers | Female/18- to 40-year-old patients/mostly self-harm cases poisoned by antidepressants | Female/children patients (52% of the calls)/mostly poisoned by illicit drugs and occupational exposures followed by self-harm exposures |
| Responders | Mostly Residents of Toxicology or Clinical Pharmacy or Pharmacology and GP | Nurses or pharmacists specialist in poison information | |
| Information Resources | Mostly provided by books and Internet resources | Provided from the national poison database | |
| TESS | Absent | Present | |
| Costs | Not been evaluated yet | 81 million dollars a year but proved to be cost-effective | |
| Antidote availability | Poor | Although not quite compatible with standards, far better than Iran | |
Toxic Exposure Surveillance System (TESS); General physicians (GP).