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Antisepsis-Driven Nosocomial Infection Control
1915 - 1921
During this period, infection-control research unified hospital-based protection with broader public-health aims, emphasizing antiseptic wound care, protective measures in clinical settings, and serum-based therapies to curb transmission. Population-level investigations into bacterial spread highlighted carrier states, reservoirs, and epidemic dynamics as essential levers for prevention in both healthcare and community settings. Laboratory microbiology and pathogen typing underpinned these efforts, enabling targeted disinfection, accurate detection of septic wounds, and improved surveillance of infectious agents.
• Clinical infection-control research emphasizes hospital protection and therapeutic interventions, including face masks, wound care, serology, and serum therapy to curb transmission in care settings. [6], [9], [10], [14], [15], [16].
• Population-level epidemiology of bacterial spread, identifying carrier states, reservoirs, and epidemic dynamics to inform public health strategies. [2], [3], [4], [5], [7], [8].
• Laboratory-based pathogen typing and microbiology underpinning infection control, including pneumococcal and streptococcal typing, septic-wound bacteriology, and microbial detection. [5], [6], [11], [18], [20].
• Host-pathogen interactions and host susceptibility shaping infection outcomes, covering pharyngeal/tonsillar responses, carrier states, and ocular/systemic manifestations. [8], [13], [15].
Quantitative Epidemic Control
1922 - 1929
Nosocomial Infection Emergence
1930 - 1959
Nosocomial Antimicrobial Resistance
1960 - 1989
Nosocomial Antimicrobial Resistance Paradigm
1990 - 2003
Genomic-Informed Staphylococcus Ecology
2004 - 2010
Genomic-Driven Infection Control
2011 - 2017
SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic Epidemiology
2018 - 2024