Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review
An Erratum on
Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review
by Daigle, L., Delesalle, L., Ravel, A., Ford, B., and Aenishaenslin, C. (2022). Front. Vet. Sci. 9:777640. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.777640
Due to a production error, the references were incorrectly numbered in Table 4 and in one paragraph.
A correction has been made to the section Results, subsection “Characteristics of Sources of Evidence,” paragraph one:
“The first article included was published in 2007 (35), but most studies (6/8) were published between 2010 and 2019 (Table 1). The northern Indigenous communities included or mentioned were Inuit from Nunavik, Canada (3/8) (7, 11, 20), Sahtu from Northwest Territories, Canada (1/8) (34), Cree and Assiniboine from Saskatchewan, Canada (2/8) (36, 37), and unspecified Natives from Alaska, USA (2/8) (10, 35). One of the United States studies (10) also compared dog bite injuries among children from non-Nordic (American Indian) and Nordic (Alaska Native) Indigenous communities and mentioned the Navajo and other American Indian communities from the USA as well. We found no publications from Eurasia.”
A correction has been made to Table 4. The corrected table appears below.
Table 4. Dog bite risk factors identified by the studies included in the scoping review (some studies may have been classified in more than one categories).
The publisher apologizes for this mistake. The original version of this article has been updated.
Keywords: scoping review, dog bites, epidemiology, indigenous, northern communities
Citation: Frontiers Production Office (2022) Erratum: Occurrence and Risk Factors of Dog Bites in Northern Indigenous Communities: A Scoping Review. Front. Vet. Sci. 9:971946. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.971946
Received: 20 June 2022; Accepted: 20 June 2022;
Published: 18 July 2022.
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