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VOLUME 18 , ISSUE 3 ( March, 2014 ) > List of Articles

EDITORIAL

Snake bite poisoning: A neglected life-threatening occupational hazard

Himmatrao Bawaskar

Citation Information : Bawaskar H. Snake bite poisoning: A neglected life-threatening occupational hazard. Indian J Crit Care Med 2014; 18 (3):123-124.

DOI: 10.4103/0972-5229.128698

License: CC BY-ND 3.0

Published Online: 01-12-2014

Copyright Statement:  Copyright © 2014; The Author(s).


Abstract

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  1. Warrell DA. Snake bite: A neglected problem in twenty-first century India. Natl Med J India 2011;24:321-4.
  2. Bawaskar HS, Bawaskar PH, Punde DP, Inamdar MK, Dongare RB, Bhoite RR. Profile of snakebite envenoming in rural Maharashtra, India. J Assoc Physicians India 2008;56:88-95.
  3. Raina R, Raina S, Kaul R, Chander V, Jaryal A. Snakebite profile from a medical college in rural setting in the hills of Himachal Pradesh, India Indian J Crit Care Med 2014:18;130-4.
  4. Uberoi HS, Achuthan AC, Kasthuri AS, Kolhe VS, Rao KR, Dugal JS. Hypopituitarism following snake bite. J Assoc Physicians India 1991;39:579-80.
  5. Bawaskar HS, Bawaskar PH. Envenoming by the common krait (Bungarus caeruleus) and Asian cobra (Naja naja): Clinical manifestations and their management in a rural setting. Wilderness Environ Med 2004;15:257-66.
  6. Bawaskar HS, Bawaskar PH. Call for global snake-bite control and procurement funding. Lancet 2001;357:1132-3.
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