Krupali Patel
- Health and sanitation
- India
Doctoral Project " Epidemiological Determinants of MRSA among Urban Livestock Keepers, Ahmedabad, India" under the One Health and Urban Transformation project
One Health
Broadly worked on WASH in HCFs, Tuberculosis, Hepatitis B, Maternal and Child Health, Adolescent Health, Nutrition, Nutrition, Zoonotic Disease, AMR, One Health
Master in Public Health
Post Basic B.Sc. Nursing
General Nursing and Midwife
One Health, AMR, WASH, Public Health, Epidemiology
Center for Development Research, University of Bonn
Institute for Hygiene and Public Health-GeoHealth Center, University of Bonn
Geography Dept., Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science, University of Bonn
Investigating the epidemiological determinants & transmission pathways of AMR focusing on MRSA among urban livestock keepers' community in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
Globally around 700,000 annual deaths are attributable to infections caused by drug-resistant pathogens. Misuse or over usage of antibiotics not only in human but also in animal and agriculture is the major contributor for Anti-Microbial Resistance (AMR). The complexity of AMR increased as antibiotics used in human and animal largely have similar molecules tat could drive the transmission of resistance pathogens between animals and humans, either directly or via the environment. One Health approach is used by developed nations to slow down the rates of AMR and to address its complexity. However, a country like India having the major burden of emerging and reemerging diseases requiring enough evidence form One Health perspective to fight against AMR. Hence, the study aims to investigate the epidemiological determinants and transmission pathways of AMR focusing on MRSA among urban livestock keeper’s community by using One Health approach in Ahmedabad city of India.
The study will use longitudinal study design with microbiological surveillance. Livestock keepers and bib-livestock keepers living in the same community will be recruited from two different areas (one urban and one peri-urban) of Ahmedabad municipal areas. Data will be collected in three phases on human health, animal health and environmental health from livestock keepers and non-livestock keepers, their animals and surrounded indoor environments of households. For microbiological surveillance nasal swabs, milk samples and surface samples will e collected and tested for MRSA. Further data will be analysed using different statistical tools and models. The expected outcome of the study is mainly to provide evidence on MRSA prevalence among human-animal-envionrment and the relative effect of MRSA among animal and environment on human health.
doctoral work
Thomas Kistemann, Prof. Dr. med
Institute for Hygiene and Public Health-GeoHealth Center, University of Bonn
Dr Timo Falkenberg
2020
Review
2019
Review
Review
Review
2018
and Downloads
CV_KBP_1st June 2020.pdf [PDF]