Flurin Condrau
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Hospital infections and the role of the community before MRSA, 1930–1960
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The historiography of hospital infections conceptualises most bacterial infections occurring in hospitals as inherently institutional. This paper challenges this notion and argues that from very early on, microbiologists working inside and outside of hospitals began to understand the link between the hospital and the community when explaining outbreaks of infections in hospitals. Looking at discussions in Britain and elsewhere in the era of the Staphylococcus aureus crisis after the Second World War, this chapter draws particular attention to key sites of hospital-community transfer, i.e. neonatal infection, as well as influenza. It argues that in both examples, the institutional nature of hospital infections remains unclear and that the community needs to be seen as a crucial site for infection control in hospitals.

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Germs and governance

The past, present and future of hospital infection, prevention and control

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