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1.
S Afr Med J ; 108(7): 546-550, 2018 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30004339

ABSTRACT

Antimicrobial stewardship programmes have been introduced worldwide in response to the rise in antimicrobial resistance. The World Health Organization has mandated each Member State to produce a plan to address this problem. We report on the organic development of an antibiotic stewardship programme in a rural regional hospital in a resource-limited setting in South Africa. This has resulted in organisational change with increased awareness, participation, monitoring and education in antibiotic stewardship throughout the hospital.


Subject(s)
Antimicrobial Stewardship/organization & administration , Hospitals, Rural , Antimicrobial Stewardship/statistics & numerical data , Humans , South Africa
2.
Epidemiol Infect ; 116(2): 169-75, 1996 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8620908

ABSTRACT

A 9-month trial of a simple typing scheme for ¿thermophilic' enteric campylobacter isolates at a large Public Health Laboratory is described. Resistotyping was performed with six agents in a method modified by Bolton and colleagues from an earlier scheme, and biotyping was performed by a modified Lior scheme involving three tests. Reproducibility was excellent in both schemes, with test variation < 2%. Five household clusters and one larger presumptive milk-borne outbreak were identified in this scheme, and confirmed in pyrolysis mass spectrometry. The 328 isolates from new patients, excluding duplication from these clusters, were divided into 35 resistotypes with the largest group comprising 22% of isolates. In combined bio- and resistotyping, 86 types were found, with the largest group comprising 9.5% of isolates. The results are contrasted with salmonella sero- and phage-typing, where, on the same basis, the 176 isolates in the same period were divided into 40 groups, with the largest comprising 45% of isolates. Resistotyping, with or without additional biotyping, proved to be a convenient, simple, rapid, highly discriminatory, reproducible and inexpensive method well suited to use in local laboratories. It is a strong candidate for first-line national and local surveillance of campylobacter infections, fulfilling a need for monitoring of this important cause of enteric disease.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Typing Techniques , Campylobacter Infections/microbiology , Campylobacter/classification , Adult , Campylobacter/isolation & purification , Campylobacter Infections/epidemiology , Child , Cluster Analysis , Disease Outbreaks , Humans , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Reproducibility of Results
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