The recent (2002) study that he references supports his assertions.
http://www.emedicine.com/EMERG/topic548.htm
Both the study that you are referring to and this study, it is acknowledged that tracking actual numbers of spider bites and then the percentage of severe envenomations resulting is an almost impossible task, as those with symptoms not warranting medical attention simply aren't counted in the clinical literature. The study you are referring to is data from verifiable cases that sought medical attention. Those numbers look high for serious envenomation, until you realize that those are a select group of bite victims already. The more hale and hearty didn't even make the count to begin with!
So, since there is a data-collection problem, they do the best they can.
Pre-anti-venin days, there were a total of 13 deaths attributable to Sydney funnel web spider bites, but they estimate that there are 30 to 40 bites PER YEAR. (From the emedicine link above)
From Rod's site:
"During the 53 year period 1927-1979 there were 13 or 14 known deaths, which would be a death rate of under 1%!"
Read the report you are referring to and the ones that Rod has referenced. The report you refer to doesn't support Rod's claims, but what you're missing is that it doesn't refute them either.
http://www.emedicine.com/EMERG/topic548.htm
Both the study that you are referring to and this study, it is acknowledged that tracking actual numbers of spider bites and then the percentage of severe envenomations resulting is an almost impossible task, as those with symptoms not warranting medical attention simply aren't counted in the clinical literature. The study you are referring to is data from verifiable cases that sought medical attention. Those numbers look high for serious envenomation, until you realize that those are a select group of bite victims already. The more hale and hearty didn't even make the count to begin with!
So, since there is a data-collection problem, they do the best they can.
Pre-anti-venin days, there were a total of 13 deaths attributable to Sydney funnel web spider bites, but they estimate that there are 30 to 40 bites PER YEAR. (From the emedicine link above)
From Rod's site:
"During the 53 year period 1927-1979 there were 13 or 14 known deaths, which would be a death rate of under 1%!"
Read the report you are referring to and the ones that Rod has referenced. The report you refer to doesn't support Rod's claims, but what you're missing is that it doesn't refute them either.