To determine whether nurses who worked in an intensive care unit (ICU) might acquire enteric colonization with Gram-negative aerobic bacteria from their patients, rectal swabs were obtained from the patients and nurses in the ICU, from nurses working in a coronary care unit (CCU) and from young women with urinary tract infection who had not been exposed to the hospital environment. The healthy women differed from the patients in that their enteric flora contained greater numbers of lactose fermenting bacteria, they were less often colonized by resistant organisms and when resistant bacteria were present they were less abundant than in the patients. Nurses who had been treated with antimicrobial agents during the preceding six months were co...
There have been reports of concomitant resistance to biocides and antibiotics particularly in clinic...
ABSTRACT Patients in intensive care unit are about 5 times more likely to acquire nosocomial infecti...
Organisms causing nosocomial infection are frequently resistant to antimicrobial agents. Studies of ...
The colonization and resistance dynamics of aerobic gram-negative bacteria in the intestinal and oro...
An intensive care unit (ICU), acute stroke unit (ASU) and medical day bed unit (MDBU) underwent a st...
bacillus isolates recovered from intensive care unit (ICU) patients in United States hospitals were ...
A prospective study of 67 patients in a nursing home and a subpopulation of 31 patients who were str...
Our aim was to determine the epidemiological characteristics, the resistance patterns and the spread...
The epidemiology of new acquisition of antibiotic-resistant organisms (AROs) in community-based skil...
Intensive care units are complex environments favoring high resistance in microorganisms. This study...
The dynamics of colonization of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in hospital settings are complex and d...
INTRODUCTION: The rates of multiresistant bacteria colonization or infection (MRB+) development in i...
Direct shedding of microbes by patients and health care workers results in contamination of Intensiv...
To determine the antimicrobial resistance profiles among clinical isolates of Enterobacteriaceae in ...
AbstractIntroductionThe rates of multiresistant bacteria colonization or infection (MRB+) developmen...
There have been reports of concomitant resistance to biocides and antibiotics particularly in clinic...
ABSTRACT Patients in intensive care unit are about 5 times more likely to acquire nosocomial infecti...
Organisms causing nosocomial infection are frequently resistant to antimicrobial agents. Studies of ...
The colonization and resistance dynamics of aerobic gram-negative bacteria in the intestinal and oro...
An intensive care unit (ICU), acute stroke unit (ASU) and medical day bed unit (MDBU) underwent a st...
bacillus isolates recovered from intensive care unit (ICU) patients in United States hospitals were ...
A prospective study of 67 patients in a nursing home and a subpopulation of 31 patients who were str...
Our aim was to determine the epidemiological characteristics, the resistance patterns and the spread...
The epidemiology of new acquisition of antibiotic-resistant organisms (AROs) in community-based skil...
Intensive care units are complex environments favoring high resistance in microorganisms. This study...
The dynamics of colonization of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in hospital settings are complex and d...
INTRODUCTION: The rates of multiresistant bacteria colonization or infection (MRB+) development in i...
Direct shedding of microbes by patients and health care workers results in contamination of Intensiv...
To determine the antimicrobial resistance profiles among clinical isolates of Enterobacteriaceae in ...
AbstractIntroductionThe rates of multiresistant bacteria colonization or infection (MRB+) developmen...
There have been reports of concomitant resistance to biocides and antibiotics particularly in clinic...
ABSTRACT Patients in intensive care unit are about 5 times more likely to acquire nosocomial infecti...
Organisms causing nosocomial infection are frequently resistant to antimicrobial agents. Studies of ...