The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Afraid of snakes? Bees, dogs deadlier

- By Nicholas Bakalar

Beware the snake, the spider and the scorpion. But know this: You are much more likely to be killed by a bee or a dog.

Of the 1,610 people killed in encounters with animals from 2008-15, 478 were killed by hornets, wasps and bees, and 272 by dogs, according to a study published in Wilderness & Environmen­tal Medicine. Snakes, spiders and scorpions were responsibl­e for 99 deaths in those years. Using a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention database, researcher­s found that 72 people annually were killed by “other mammals,” including horses, cattle and pigs.

Only six people a year died from snakebites, and six after being bitten by a venomous spider.

But 95 children younger than 10 were killed by dogs over the eight years. The fatality rate from dog attacks on children younger than 4 was twice as high as for people older than 65, and four times higher than that of other age groups. “Children under 4 are at substantia­l risk,” said the lead author, Dr. Jared A. Forrester, a surgical resident at Stanford University. “And it’s usually family dogs or dogs known to the children who are doing the killing.”

Overall, about 72 percent of the victims were men, and most were 35-64 years old. The Southeast had the highest number of deaths and the highest death rate, while the Northeast had the lowest.

The data has some limitation­s. It does not include fatalities from car crashes with deer and other animals. According to the CDC, that results in about 200 deaths a year. And causes of death may have been misclassif­ied because of the limitation­s of informatio­n provided by death certificat­es. Among non-domestic animals, bees, wasps and hornets present the greatest danger.

The problem is growing worse, he said, because of the recent increase in the price of a lifesaving medicine for insect stings: epinephrin­e auto-injectors, including the EpiPen. “The 400 percent increase in the price of the medicine used for anaphylaxi­s is a significan­t public health issue,” he said.

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