Towards understanding global patterns of antimicrobial use and resistance in neonatal sepsis: insights from the NeoAMR network.
Grace LiJulia Anna BielickiA S M Nawshad Uddin AhmedMohammad Shahidul IslamEitan Naaman BerezinClery B GallacciRuth GuinsburgCarlos Eduardo da Silva FigueiredoRosilene Santarone VieiraAndre Ricardo SilvaCristiane TeixeiraPaul TurnerLadin NhanJaime OrregoPaola Marsela PérezLifeng QiVassiliki PapaevangelouPinelope TriantafyllidouElias IosifidisEmmanuel RoilidesKosmas SarafidisDasaratha Ramaiah JinkaRaghuprakash Reddy NayakantiPraveen KumarVikas GautamVinayagam PrakashArasar SeeralarSrinivas MurkiHemasree KandrajuSanjeev SinghAnil KumarLeslie LewisJayashree PukayasthaDebasish NandaYogesha K NSuman ChaurasiaHarish ChellaniStephen ObaroAngela DramowskiAdrie BekkerAndrew WhitelawReenu ThomasSithembiso Christopher VelaphiDaynia Elizabeth BallotTrusha NanaGary ReubensonJoy FredericksSuvaporn AnugulruengkittAnongnart SirisubPimol WongSorasak LochindaratSuppawat BoonkasidechaKanchana PreedisripipatTim R CresseyPongsatorn PaopongsawanPagakrong LumbiganonDounghatai PongpanutPra-Ornsuda SukrakanchanaPhilippa MusokeLinus OlsonMattias LarssonPaul T HeathMichael SharlandPublished in: Archives of disease in childhood (2019)
AMR is already a significant issue in NNUs worldwide. The apparent burden of AMR in a given NNU in the LMIC setting can be influenced by a range of factors which will vary substantially between NNUs. These variations must be considered when designing interventions to improve neonatal mortality globally.