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Clinical bacteriology in low-resource settings: today's solutions

Authors :
Ombelet, Sien
Ronat, Jean Baptiste
Walsh, Timothy T.S.
Yansouni, Cedric C.P.
Cox, Janneke
Vlieghe, Erika
Martiny, Delphine
Semret, Makeda
Vandenberg, Olivier
Jacobs, Jan Adriaan J.
Lunguya, Octavie
Phoba, Marie France
Lompo, Palpouguini
PHE, Thong
KARIUKI, Samuel
NEWTON, Paul P.N.
Dance, David Allan Brett
MUVUNYI, Claude
EL SAFI, Sayda
BARBE, Barbara
Falay, Dadi
AFFOLABI, Dissou
PAGE, Maurice
LANGENDORF, Céline
GILLE, Yves
LEENSTRA, Tjalling
STELLING, John
Naas, Thierry
KESTEMAN, Thomas
SEIFU, Daniel
DELAROCQUE-ASTAGNEAU, Elisabeth
SCHULTSZ, Constance
SCHUTT-GEROWITT, Heidi
LETCHFORD, Joanne
WERTHEIM, Heiman
Kahlmeter, Gunnar
AIDARA KANE, Awa
Ombelet, Sien
Ronat, Jean Baptiste
Walsh, Timothy T.S.
Yansouni, Cedric C.P.
Cox, Janneke
Vlieghe, Erika
Martiny, Delphine
Semret, Makeda
Vandenberg, Olivier
Jacobs, Jan Adriaan J.
Lunguya, Octavie
Phoba, Marie France
Lompo, Palpouguini
PHE, Thong
KARIUKI, Samuel
NEWTON, Paul P.N.
Dance, David Allan Brett
MUVUNYI, Claude
EL SAFI, Sayda
BARBE, Barbara
Falay, Dadi
AFFOLABI, Dissou
PAGE, Maurice
LANGENDORF, Céline
GILLE, Yves
LEENSTRA, Tjalling
STELLING, John
Naas, Thierry
KESTEMAN, Thomas
SEIFU, Daniel
DELAROCQUE-ASTAGNEAU, Elisabeth
SCHULTSZ, Constance
SCHUTT-GEROWITT, Heidi
LETCHFORD, Joanne
WERTHEIM, Heiman
Kahlmeter, Gunnar
AIDARA KANE, Awa
Source :
Lancet. Infectious diseases, 18 (8
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Low-resource settings are disproportionately burdened by infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance. Good quality clinical bacteriology through a well functioning reference laboratory network is necessary for effective resistance control, but low-resource settings face infrastructural, technical, and behavioural challenges in the implementation of clinical bacteriology. In this Personal View, we explore what constitutes successful implementation of clinical bacteriology in low-resource settings and describe a framework for implementation that is suitable for general referral hospitals in low-income and middle-income countries with a moderate infrastructure. Most microbiological techniques and equipment are not developed for the specific needs of such settings. Pending the arrival of a new generation diagnostics for these settings, we suggest focus on improving, adapting, and implementing conventional, culture-based techniques. Priorities in low-resource settings include harmonised, quality assured, and tropicalised equipment, consumables, and techniques, and rationalised bacterial identification and testing for antimicrobial resistance. Diagnostics should be integrated into clinical care and patient management; clinically relevant specimens must be appropriately selected and prioritised. Open-access training materials and information management tools should be developed. Also important is the need for onsite validation and field adoption of diagnostics in low-resource settings, with considerable shortening of the time between development and implementation of diagnostics. We argue that the implementation of clinical bacteriology in low-resource settings improves patient management, provides valuable surveillance for local antibiotic treatment guidelines and national policies, and supports containment of antimicrobial resistance and the prevention and control of hospital-acquired infections.<br />SCOPUS: re.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Lancet. Infectious diseases, 18 (8
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1110016594
Document Type :
Electronic Resource