Using genomics to understand the epidemiology of infectious diseases in the Top End of Australia’s Northern Territory

Author(s)
Meumann, Ella
Publication Date
2022-09
Abstract
At the commencement of this PhD, next generation sequencing technologies were increasingly being implemented for public health surveillance of infectious diseases; the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated this globally. The applications of this technology are protean, from detection of novel pathogens, to tracing the source of cases with no obvious transmission link, to surveillance for emerging strains with increased transmissibility or immune evasion, and to detection of determinants of virulence or antimicrobial resistance. The questions that can be addressed and potential implications depend on the ecology, epidemiology, and public health response for each pathogen. In this thesis, I use genomic sequencing to investigate the epidemiology of three bacterial pathogens that cause community-acquired infection in the NT Top End.
Link
Publisher
Menzies School of Health Research
Subject
disease
genomics
tuberculosis
genomic sequencing
Acinetobacter baumannii
A. baumannii
Burkholderia pseudomallei
melioidosis
sepsis
B. pseudomallei
SARS-CoV-2
COVID-19
Title
Using genomics to understand the epidemiology of infectious diseases in the Top End of Australia’s Northern Territory
Type of document
Report
Entity Type
Publication

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