Diagnostic Bacteriology in District Hospitals in Sub-Saharan Africa: At the Forefront of the Containment of Antimicrobial Resistance
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Abstract
This review provides an update on the factors fuelling antimicrobial resistance and
shows the impact of these factors in low-resource settings. We detail the challenges
and barriers to integrating clinical bacteriology in hospitals in low-resource settings, as
well as the opportunities provided by the recent capacity building efforts of national
laboratory networks focused on vertical single-disease programmes. The programmes
for HIV, tuberculosis and malaria have considerably improved laboratory medicine
in Sub-Saharan Africa, paving the way for clinical bacteriology. Furthermore, special
attention is paid to topics that are less familiar to the general medical community, such
as the crucial role of regulatory frameworks for diagnostics and the educational profile
required for a productive laboratory workforce in low-resource settings. Traditionally,
clinical bacteriology laboratories have been a part of higher levels of care, and, as a result,
they were poorly linked to clinical practices and thus underused. By establishing and
consolidating clinical bacteriology laboratories at the hospital referral level in low-resource
settings, routine patient care data can be collected for surveillance, antibiotic stewardship
and infection prevention and control. Together, these activities form a synergistic tripartite
effort at the frontline of the emergence and spread of multi-drug resistant bacteria. If
challenges related to staff, funding, scale, and the specific nature of clinical bacteriology
are prioritized, a major leap forward in the containment of antimicrobial resistance can
be achieved. The mobilization of resources coordinated by national laboratory plans
and interventions tailored by a good understanding of the hospital microcosm will be
crucial to success, and further contributions will be made by market interventions and
business models for diagnostic laboratories. The future clinical bacteriology laboratory
in a low-resource setting will not be an “entry-level version” of its counterparts in
high-resource settings, but a purpose-built, well-conceived, cost-effective and efficient
diagnostic facility at the forefront of antimicrobial resistance containment.
