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Snake bite study says these 2 things can help keep you safe

USA Today
Summary
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82% Informative

An estimated 7,000 to 8,000 people are bitten annually by venomous snakes in the U.S. , according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention .

Most bites reported at one local hospital occurred in adult men, a third of whom intentionally interacted with a wild venomous snake.

Study also revealed important information for snake bite victims everywhere: Most victims wait too long to seek treatment, and too many try outdated methods for self-treatment.

A third of all the bites in the University of Florida study were the result of intentional interaction.

Most bites ( 62.7% ) occurred on hands and fingers.

A unified system for treating snakebites within individual regions or hospital systems may improve response times.

The timber rattlesnake and the Eastern diamondback were responsible for the most significant symptoms.

VR Score

82

Informative language

81

Neutral language

65

Article tone

semi-formal

Language

English

Language complexity

57

Offensive language

possibly offensive

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not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

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not detected

Time-value

medium-lived

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