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New data raise the specter of completely resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains, and options are few.
The cluster has been classified as a meningococcal C outbreak, but a cofactor may be involved.
Monitoring of contacts identified in three recent MERS-CoV hospital clusters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, ended on Jun 30, and no other cases have been detected, keeping the total number of people infected in the recent outbreaks to 49, the World Health Organization (WHO) said today in an update on the disease.
After France implemented national guidelines in 2011, antibiotic prescriptions for acute respiratory infections (ARIs) in children in emergency departments (EDs) dropped 31% over 3 years, representing more than 13,000 avoided antibiotic prescriptions, according to data presented yesterday in Clinical Infectious Diseases.
A second case of vaccine-derived polio is reported in Raqqa, Syria, while a Pakistani toddler has a wild poliovirus infection.
The sharp rise is independent of known C diff risk factors and occurred across all US regions.
Saudi Arabia yesterday reported one new MERS-CoV case, involving a 57-year-old Saudi woman from Hail, and the World Health Organization (WHO) provided a detailed report on a recently announced imported infection detected in Lebanon.
In other MERS-CoV news, following a surge of hospital-related cases from Riyadh, new cases in Saudi Arabia seem to be slowing, with one illness reported over the past 6 days.
The first case was identified in late April, and over the past 8 weeks, medical workers registered and followed 583 contacts.
The World Health Organization (WHO) announced yesterday that a shipment containing 400 tons of equipment and supplies, including ambulances, arrived in Yemen on Jun 30 to help with the country's cholera outbreak.
A 'nudging' strategy uses psychosocial factors to improve prescribing.
Cases are down from the 10 reported last week but show ongoing virus circulation in the summer.
A hands-on educational program dramatically increased primary school students' knowledge of antibiotic action and use, according to a study yesterday in the International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents.
Our weekly wrap-up of antimicrobial stewardship & antimicrobial resistance scans
A study in children tested for flu over three seasons at a New Orleans hospital found modest but consistent flu vaccine effectiveness, that a switch from the inactivated trivalent to quadrivalent (four-strain) formulation didn't seem to help or hurt effectiveness, and that the inhaled version of the vaccine didn't perform as well, but improved over successive seasons.
The new vaccine-derived cases lift the outbreak total to 22, all but 1 in Deir ez-Zor governorate.
The plan focuses on promoting best practices, boosting innovation, and shaping the global agenda.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) that the 2016-17 flu season was dominated by influenza A (H3N2), and the flu vaccine was only 34% effective in protecting recipients against that strain and 42% effective against all strains.
The authors of the study say they're concerned the gene may already be widely disseminated.
The patch produced a strong immune response and was well tolerated in 50 volunteers.