TSN® Database Australia, a new tool to monitor antimicrobial resistance in Australia

Authors

  • John Turnidge Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Women's and Children's Hospital, Microbiology Department, North Adelaide, South Australia
  • Laurence R McCarthy Focus Technologies Inc, Virginia, United States of America
  • Ronald N Master Focus Technologies Inc, Virginia, United States of America
  • Douglas E Kepner Focus Technologies Inc, Virginia, United States of America
  • James Weslock Australasia and Canada, Focus Technologies Inc, Ontario, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2003.27.24

Keywords:

monitoring, TSN database, antimicrobial resistance

Abstract

An electronic network of Australian microbiology laboratories was established to monitor the emergence and occurrence of antimicrobial resistance among clinically relevant bacteria. It is believed that the data network collected approximately 42 per cent of all antibacterial susceptibility test results generated by Australian laboratories. The network comprised 94 hospitals and 9 private commercial laboratories. Selected data elements were extracted and electronically transmitted to a central location. Upon receipt, all data were first normalised and thereafter examined for errors. Duplicate results for the same patient were identified to prevent skewing of the data toward resistance. All data passing quality assessment was staged for release of a new database release that occurred monthly. Unusual test results were first validated prior to their inclusion into the database. Using an Internet-based query tool, individual institutions could query their own data, but could only query aggregated data for other regional or national analyses. Individual patient results could be examined nor could the results of any individual institution other than their own. As of March 2002, TSN Database Australia contained 14,648,752 test results, from 2,000,394 strains (453 different taxa) and 1,213,605 patients. Since the same database concept has been established in 10 other countries (United States of America, Europe, and Canada), observations made in Australia may be compared to those observed elsewhere in the world. This article will describe TSN in greater detail, describe the query tool and some of the analyses that are possible. Commun Dis Intell 2003;27 Suppl:S67-S69.

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Published

30/05/03

How to Cite

Turnidge, John, Laurence R McCarthy, Ronald N Master, Douglas E Kepner, and James Weslock. 2003. “TSN® Database Australia, a New Tool to Monitor Antimicrobial Resistance in Australia”. Communicable Diseases Intelligence 27 (May):S67-S69. https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2003.27.24.

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Section

Short report

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