While UTIs often occur due to sexual activity or hygiene, there are four surprising things that could be to blame for a UTI — ...
It’s antibiotic season. Brush up on how you should use them — and when to avoid them. Credit...Petra Eriksson Supported by By Dawn MacKeen Chasing away an infection with the right antibiotic can feel ...
According to a WHO report, 1 in 6 bacterial infections will be resistant to antibiotics by 2023. This means that common ...
Researchers at Trinity Translational Medicine Institute (TTMI) and the Irish Mycobacterial Reference Laboratory at St James's ...
A new World Health Organization study finds 1 in 6 infections worldwide are resistant to some antibiotics, highlighting a growing threat from drug-resistant bacteria. The World Health Organization ...
The study on urinary tract infections was based in Southern California, but researchers said the findings may apply to communities across the United States.
Cumulatively, from 2025 to 2050, the world could see more than 39 million deaths that are directly attributable to antimicrobial resistance or AMR, according to the study, which was published Monday ...
It is possible to use shorter antibiotic courses for proven blood infections in newborn babies or use courses guided by normalisation of blood tests, without any added risks.
One in six bacterial infections worldwide is now resistant to standard treatments, according to anew report from the World Health Organization (WHO) that identified an alarming global rise in ...
Of more than 2,000 people with UTIs included in a recently published study, almost 20% were linked back to raw meat ...