Modernising Medical Microbiology
About
Modernising Medical Microbiology is a research group aiming to transform how we analyse and treat infections, to improve patient care.
We aim to:
- Modernise the way we analyse infections, bringing cutting-edge scientific techniques to clinical care.
- Transform they way we study the treatment of patients with infections, using large databases of hospital electronic information, to identify trends in how infections are behaving, and ways patient care can be improved.
- Use techniques such as DNA analysis of bacteria and viruses to better understand how infections spread, how to treat them, and how to prevent them in the future.
- Study how bacteria become resistant to antibiotics, and more difficult to treat, and how to prevent this.
Modernising Medical Microbiology studies a number of infections, in particular, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB), - the Enterobacterales family (Escherichia coli, Klebsiella species and others) and Clostridium difficile (C. diff). You can learn more about these bacteria here
MMM News
TWiM 303: Can our microbiome break our hearts?
4 March 2024
Fitness compensation in m.tuberculosis: a game of genetic chess
27 February 2024
COVID-19: accelerating testing with robotics
3 April 2023
MMM Publications
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SARS-CoV-2, influenza A/B and respiratory syncytial virus positivity and association with influenza-like illness and self-reported symptoms, over the 2022/23 winter season in the UK: a longitudinal surveillance cohort.
Journal article
Dietz E. et al, (2024), BMC Med, 22
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The impact of different antimicrobial exposures on the gut microbiome in the ARMORD observational study
Preprint
Peto L. et al, (2024)
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Risk of SARS-CoV-2 reinfection during multiple Omicron variant waves in the UK general population.
Journal article
Wei J. et al, (2024), Nature communications, 15
Projects
The Modernising Medical Microbiology Research Group has many active research projects.
You can learn more about the projects here.
Public Involvement
If you are interested in being a part of our public engagement team, please get in contact!
Pathogens and viruses
What Pathogens and Viruses do the MMM team research?