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Authors whose works are in public domain in at least one jurisdiction

List of works by Brian M Forde

<xhtml:span xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en">The complete genome sequence of five pre-2013 Escherichia coli sequence type (ST)1193 strains reveals insights into an emerging pathogen </xhtml:span>

Author Response: High-risk Escherichia coli clones that cause neonatal meningitis and association with recrudescent infection

Author Response: High-risk Escherichia coli clones that cause neonatal meningitis and association with recrudescent infection

Clinical implementation of routine whole-genome sequencing for hospital infection control of multi-drug resistant pathogens

Genomic characterisation and context of the blaNDM-1 carbapenemase in Escherichia coli ST101

Genomic epidemiology reveals geographical clustering of multidrug-resistant Escherichia coli sequence type (ST)131 associated with bacteraemia in Wales, United Kingdom

Genomic investigation reveals contaminated detergent as the source of an ESBL-producing Klebsiella michiganensis outbreak in a neonatal unit

Genomic surveillance, characterisation and intervention of a carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii outbreak in critical care

High-risk Escherichia coli clones that cause neonatal meningitis and association with recrudescent infection

High-risk Escherichia coli clones that cause neonatal meningitis and association with recrudescent infection

High-riskEscherichia coliclones that cause neonatal meningitis and association with recrudescent infection

Intensive infection control responses and whole genome sequencing to interrupt and resolve widespread transmission of OXA-181 Escherichia coli in a hospital setting

Strain and lineage-level methylome heterogeneity in the multi-drug resistant pathogenicEscherichia coliST101 clone

Systematic benchmarking of ‘all-in-one’ microbial SNP calling pipelines

The complete genome sequence of five historical Escherichia coli sequence type (ST)1193 strains reveals insights into an emerging pathogen