Publications by authors named "Lata Kapoor"

Background: Health-care-associated infections (HAIs) cause significant morbidity and mortality globally, including in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Networks of hospitals implementing standardised HAI surveillance can provide valuable data on HAI burden, and identify and monitor HAI prevention gaps. Hospitals in many LMICs use HAI case definitions developed for higher-resourced settings, which require human resources and laboratory and imaging tests that are often not available.

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Objectives: In May 2018, a laboratory network for antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance in Tamil Nadu, India, detected a cluster of serotype Typhi (. Typhi) isolates resistant to ceftriaxone. We investigated to describe the epidemiology and identify risk factors for the outbreak.

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Article Synopsis
  • Healthcare associated infections (HAIs) are common and hard to manage, but many can be prevented through good Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) practices.
  • A study evaluated IPC practices in 32 Indian hospitals using the WHO’s self-assessment tool, revealing varying levels of IPC implementation: 13% had basic practices, 28% had intermediate, and 59% had advanced practices.
  • The findings highlight the need for quality improvement training for IPC nurses and healthcare professionals to enhance infection control efforts in these facilities.
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Introduction: Antimicrobial-resistant HAI (Healthcare associated infection) are a global challenge due to their impact on patient outcome. Implementation of antimicrobial stewardship programmes (AMSP) is needed at institutional and national levels. Assessment of core capacities for AMSP is an important starting point to initiate nationwide AMSP.

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Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) caused by mycoplasmas is very rare. This report describes a severe case of atypical pneumonia due to M. pneumoniae in a formerly healthy young woman who developed high grade fever and cough leading to severe disseminated lung disease and finally to fatal ARDS.

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Septicemia continues to be an important cause of morbidity and mortality in the neonatal units and periodic review of cases to assess any changing trends in the infecting organisms and their antimicrobial susceptibility is important. Over a period of one year (July 2000 to June 2001), 632 samples of blood cultures were submitted to the bacteriology laboratory Microbiology, Lady Hardinge Medical College. These samples were investigated for microbial etiology and the isolates obtained were tested for their susceptibility to the commonly used antibiotics.

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Background And Objectives: Salmonella Worthington has been known to be a causative agent for childhood diarrhoea. There is a paucity of information on the molecular relatedness of the strains isolated in various hospitals in India. The present study was carried out to attempt molecular typing of a cluster of Salmonella Worthington isolates obtained from cases of infantile diarrhoea during a six month period, from a tertiary care paediatric hospital in Delhi, India.

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Background: Guillain-Barré syndrome is the most common cause of acute neuromuscular paralysis and is considered a post-infectious disease.

Methods: Twenty patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome admitted to the Neurosciences Centre at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences from November 1997 to August 1998 were investigated for evidence of antecedent infections. This case-control study included 2 controls for each patient, one a household control and the other an age- and sex-matched hospital control suffering from a neurological illness other than Guillain-Barré syndrome.

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Enterococci are one of the leading causes of nosocomial infections. In recent years, enterococci have become increasingly resistant to a wide range of antimicrobial agents. From April to October 2001, a study was conducted to speciate and determine the antimicrobial susceptibility of 50 isolates of enterococci from bacteremic children.

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Background: The contribution of Chlamydia spp in respiratory tract infections in paediatric population from India has not been studied in detail.

Methods: Sixty children under five years of age who were admitted with acute lower respiratory tract infection during a one year period were investigated for Chlamydial aetiology of respiratory infection. Diagnosis was based on antigen detection by direct immunofluorescence (DIF) in throat swab along with anti-Chlamydial immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody demonstration by solid phase enzyme immunoassay (EIA).

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Malaria, leprosy and dapsone.

Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health

September 2003

Although the preventive action of dapsone against P. falciparum malaria was known for many years, there was no report about the incidence of P. falciparum malaria in leprosy patients treated with dapsone, especially from areas of Southeast Asia where both leprosy and malaria are endemic.

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