Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco

The objective of this study is to assess trends in death cases caused by carbon monoxide poisoning and to determine the possible reasons for a risk predisposition for a given sex in the event of a possible trend. In doing so, professionals working in the field of prevention take into account in cont...

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Autores principales: Chahboune Mohammed, Khadmaoui Abderrazzak, Soulaymani Abdelmajid, Mokhtari Abdelrhani, Nshimiyimana François Xavier, Soulaymani-Bencheikh Rachida
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Publicado: EDP Sciences 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/fe01dc8178974e64b32b6c9cde02968f
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:fe01dc8178974e64b32b6c9cde02968f2021-12-02T17:11:26ZGender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco2267-124210.1051/e3sconf/202131902018https://doaj.org/article/fe01dc8178974e64b32b6c9cde02968f2021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/95/e3sconf_vigisan_02018.pdfhttps://doaj.org/toc/2267-1242The objective of this study is to assess trends in death cases caused by carbon monoxide poisoning and to determine the possible reasons for a risk predisposition for a given sex in the event of a possible trend. In doing so, professionals working in the field of prevention take into account in control programs. Methods: Study of the regional and national evolution of sex-specific lethalities due to carbon monoxide poisoning based on deaths reported by the Anti-poison Center and Pharmacovigilance (CAPM) in the 16 regions for the period 1999-2013. Results: The chronological evolution of case-specific mortality rates on the whole shows an increasing trend for both sexes, which is in perfect proportion with the growth of deaths reported because of CO in the different regions. However, the values for the male, whose average for the period studied is 1.106%, are larger than those for females, whose average is only 0.618%. This more masculine tendency of lethalities cannot obviously be attributed to sex, nor to the particularities of deadly human CO exposure since all deaths are accidental and not related to socio-professional characteristics. Conclusion: The fatal risk in case of CO intoxication seems to favor a rather masculine superiority. This difference in lethality is simply explained by differences in the frequencies of poisoning and their fatal evolutions. Indeed, the quotient would be more masculine since the deaths due to the CO are practically similar for both sexes, whereas the frequency of the intoxications is more feminine.Chahboune MohammedKhadmaoui AbderrazzakSoulaymani AbdelmajidMokhtari AbdelrhaniNshimiyimana François XavierSoulaymani-Bencheikh RachidaEDP Sciencesarticleintoxicationsex-specific lethalitycarbon monoxidemoroccoEnvironmental sciencesGE1-350ENFRE3S Web of Conferences, Vol 319, p 02018 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
topic intoxication
sex-specific lethality
carbon monoxide
morocco
Environmental sciences
GE1-350
spellingShingle intoxication
sex-specific lethality
carbon monoxide
morocco
Environmental sciences
GE1-350
Chahboune Mohammed
Khadmaoui Abderrazzak
Soulaymani Abdelmajid
Mokhtari Abdelrhani
Nshimiyimana François Xavier
Soulaymani-Bencheikh Rachida
Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco
description The objective of this study is to assess trends in death cases caused by carbon monoxide poisoning and to determine the possible reasons for a risk predisposition for a given sex in the event of a possible trend. In doing so, professionals working in the field of prevention take into account in control programs. Methods: Study of the regional and national evolution of sex-specific lethalities due to carbon monoxide poisoning based on deaths reported by the Anti-poison Center and Pharmacovigilance (CAPM) in the 16 regions for the period 1999-2013. Results: The chronological evolution of case-specific mortality rates on the whole shows an increasing trend for both sexes, which is in perfect proportion with the growth of deaths reported because of CO in the different regions. However, the values for the male, whose average for the period studied is 1.106%, are larger than those for females, whose average is only 0.618%. This more masculine tendency of lethalities cannot obviously be attributed to sex, nor to the particularities of deadly human CO exposure since all deaths are accidental and not related to socio-professional characteristics. Conclusion: The fatal risk in case of CO intoxication seems to favor a rather masculine superiority. This difference in lethality is simply explained by differences in the frequencies of poisoning and their fatal evolutions. Indeed, the quotient would be more masculine since the deaths due to the CO are practically similar for both sexes, whereas the frequency of the intoxications is more feminine.
format article
author Chahboune Mohammed
Khadmaoui Abderrazzak
Soulaymani Abdelmajid
Mokhtari Abdelrhani
Nshimiyimana François Xavier
Soulaymani-Bencheikh Rachida
author_facet Chahboune Mohammed
Khadmaoui Abderrazzak
Soulaymani Abdelmajid
Mokhtari Abdelrhani
Nshimiyimana François Xavier
Soulaymani-Bencheikh Rachida
author_sort Chahboune Mohammed
title Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco
title_short Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco
title_full Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco
title_fullStr Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco
title_full_unstemmed Gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in Morocco
title_sort gender-specific lethality due to carbon monoxide poisoning in morocco
publisher EDP Sciences
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/fe01dc8178974e64b32b6c9cde02968f
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AT soulaymaniabdelmajid genderspecificlethalityduetocarbonmonoxidepoisoninginmorocco
AT mokhtariabdelrhani genderspecificlethalityduetocarbonmonoxidepoisoninginmorocco
AT nshimiyimanafrancoisxavier genderspecificlethalityduetocarbonmonoxidepoisoninginmorocco
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