Last data update: May 13, 2024. (Total: 46773 publications since 2009)
Records 1-2 (of 2 Records) |
Query Trace: Piedrahita C[original query] |
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Challenges in identifying Candida auris in hospital clinical laboratories: a need for hospital and public health laboratory collaboration in rapid identification of an emerging pathogen
Durante AJ , Maloney MH , Leung VH , Razeq JH , Banach DB . Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2018 39 (8) 1-2 Candida auris is an emerging fungus that poses a considerable threat to US healthcare facilities and their patients. Patients exposed to C. auris can develop invasive infection, which can be fatal,Reference Lockhart, Etienne and Vallabhaneni 1 or can become colonized, which poses long-term transmission risks. Once introduced into a healthcare facility, C. auris can spread through contact with affected patients and contaminated surfaces.Reference Tsay, Welsh and Adams 2 The organism can persist in the environment,Reference Welsh, Bentz and Shams 3 and quaternary ammonium disinfectants demonstrate poor activity against it.Reference Cadnum, Shaikh, Piedrahita and Sankar 4 Candida auris is often multidrug-resistant,Reference Lockhart, Etienne and Vallabhaneni 1 , Reference Cadnum, Shaikh, Piedrahita and Sankar4 and its detection is challenging because it can be misidentified by some biochemically based identification methods. For example, the API 20 C (bioMerieux, Marcy-l’Etoile, France) can misidentify C. auris as C. sake or Rhodotorula glutinis, and the Vitek 2 (bioMerieux) can misidentify C. auris as C. haemulonii or C. duobushaemulonii.Reference Mizusawa, Miller and Green 5 Rapid and accurate C. auris detection would help hospitals to guide infection control activities intended to prevent the spread of the fungus within and between facilities and to properly plan antifungal treatment. We surveyed laboratories that serve Connecticut’s acute-care hospitals to assess their capability to identify C. auris. The information was collected to guide statewide hospital prevention efforts. |
Growing fit: Georgia's model for engaging early care environments in preventing childhood obesity
McDavid K , Piedrahita C , Hashima P , Vall EA , Kay C , O'Connor J . J Ga Public Health Assoc 2016 5 (3) 266-275 BACKGROUND: In the United States, one in three children is overweight or obese by their fifth birthday. In Georgia, 35 percent of children are overweight or obese. Contrary to popular belief, children who are overweight or obese are likely to be the same weight status as adults, making early childhood an essential time to address weight status. An estimated 380,000 Georgia children attend early care and education environments, such as licensed child care centers, Head Start, and pre-kindergarten programs, which provide an opportunity to reach large numbers of children, including those at risk for obesity and overweight. METHODS: To address this opportunity, the Georgia Department of Public Health, Georgia Shape - the Governor's Initiative to prevent childhood obesity, and HealthMPowers, Inc., created the Growing Fit training and toolkit to assist early childhood educators in creating policy, systems, and environmental changes that support good nutrition and physical activity. This report, the first related to this project, describes the training and its dissemination between January and December 2015. RESULTS: A total of 103 early childcare educators from 39 early childcare education centers (22 individual childcare systems) from 19 counties in Georgia were trained. Fifteen systems completed a pre and post-test assessment of their system, demonstrating slight improvements. Training for an additional 125 early childcare education centers is planned for 2016. CONCLUSIONS: Lessons learned from the first year of the training include the need for more robust assessment of adoption and implementation of policy, systems, and environmental changes in trained centers. |
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