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Nalini Singh

Researcher at George Washington University

Publications -  34
Citations -  3935

Nalini Singh is an academic researcher from George Washington University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 26 publications receiving 2385 citations. Previous affiliations of Nalini Singh include Children's National Medical Center.

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Discovery, research, and development of new antibiotics: the WHO priority list of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and tuberculosis.

Evelina Tacconelli, +81 more
TL;DR: Future development strategies should focus on antibiotics that are active against multidrug-resistant tuberculosis and Gram-negative bacteria, and include antibiotic-resistant bacteria responsible for community-acquired infections.
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The costs associated with nosocomial bloodstream infections in the pediatric intensive care unit.

TL;DR: The costs and LOS associated with nosocomial BSI in patients admitted to the PICU were significantly higher than controls and there was a trend toward increased hospital mortality among cases.
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Risk of resistant infections with Enterobacteriaceae in hospitalized neonates.

TL;DR: In this paper, risk factors associated with progression from colonization to infection with health care-associated antimicrobial-nonsusceptible Enterobacteriaceae (ANE) in critically ill neonates were determined.
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Change in epidemiology of health care-associated infections in a neonatal intensive care unit.

TL;DR: There is a change in the epidemiology of health care-associated infections in a Level III NICU at a free-standing children’s hospital with a predominance of GNR, which can impact choice of antimicrobials for the empiric treatment of health Care- associated infections in high risk neonates.
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Control of vancomycin-resistant enterococci in the neonatal intensive care unit.

TL;DR: Control of transmission of multi-clonal VRE strains was achieved and active surveillance cultures, together with implementation of other infection control measures, combined with rep-PCR DNA fingerprinting were instrumental in controlling VRE transmission in the NICU.