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Multidisciplinary unit to focus on rise of ‘superbugs’ identified by WHO as a leading threat to global health, responsible for 700,000 annual deaths worldwide

October 20, 2021 (Montreal, Quebec) – Globally, Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) causes approximately 700,000 deaths annually, a number projected to reach over The prevalence of AMR in Canada is projected to reach 40% by this time, a plausible scenario if no interventions successfully curb their rise.

Classified as: Antibiotic resistance, antimicrobial resistance, superbugs AMR antimicrobial resistance bacteria fungi
Published on: 20 Oct 2021

Researchers at the Montreal Children’s Hospital of the Ï㽶ÊÓƵ Health Centre – the Children’s - and the CHU Sainte-Justine are coming together within the scope of two new projects, funded under the auspices of the McGill Interdisciplinary Initiative in Infection and Immunity (MI4): improving the diagnosis and treatment of bacterial pneumonia and better understanding rare immune disorders.

Improving the appropriateness of antibiotic use to treat pneumonia

Classified as: bacterial pneumonias, Antibiotic resistance, rare immune disorders, primary immunodeficiencies, McGill Interdisciplinary Initiative in Infection and Immunity, Dr. Jesse Papenburg, Dr. Jocelyn Gravel, Fabien Touzot, Constantin Polychronako, CHU Sainte-Justine, Montreal Children’s Hospital Foundation, Research Institute of the Montreal University Health Centre, MI4
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Published on: 13 Feb 2020

Antibiotic resistance is a growing global health threat. So much so that a 2014 study commissioned by the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom predicted that, if the problem is left unchecked, in less than 35 years more people will die from antibiotic resistant superbugs than from cancer. It is critical that researchers develop new antibiotics informed by knowledge of how superbugs are resistant to this medication.

Classified as: medicine, McGill, mcgill research, antibiotics, Antibiotic resistance, berguis, mcgill medicine
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Published on: 3 May 2017

McGill Newsroom

Antibiotic resistance represents a major challenge in treating pathogenic bacterial infections.

Now, researchers at Ï㽶ÊÓƵ have discovered a possible target for fighting back against resistant bacteria.

Classified as: antibiotics, Antibiotic resistance, health and lifestyle, bacterial infection, Albert Berghuis, enzyme, motion sensors, pathogenic bacteria
Published on: 9 Jun 2016
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