Search Results
Sort by:
Filter 0
Sort by
16 April 2023 - P1486
Under a One Health approach: genomic characterisation and in vivo virulence of Escherichia coli belonging to ST131
16 April 2023 - P1459
Dissection and potential association of Klebsiella pneumoniae of the emerging high-risk clones ST307 and ST147 from retail meat and human clinical origin
16 April 2023 - P1483
From farm to fork: assessment of meat as a source of ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae and potentially uropathogenic E. coli for consumers
23 April 2022 - P0344
Comparison of occurring multidrug-resistance plasmids in Klebsiella pneumoniae in urinary tract infections (UTIs) and retail meat originating from Spain
14 April 2019 - P1361
From the poultry farm to the table: ST131, MDR, mcr-1 and potentially uropathogenic isolates of Escherichia coli 
14 April 2019 - P1207
Avian meat as a transmission source of ESBL-producing multdrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae and of potential urinary tract infection-causing Escherichia coli isolates
14 April 2019 - P1360
Whole genome sequencing and characteristics of mcr-1-harbouring plasmids of porcine Escherichia coli isolates belonging to the high-risk clone O25:H4-B2-ST131 clade B
25 April 2017 - P2090
Prevalence and characterization of stx and/or eae-positive Escherichia coli strains isolated from wildlife
Loading ...
FAQ
To access content in the eLibrary you need to log in with your ESCMID member or user credentials. If you haven’t registered as an ESCMID member yet, then click here to do so – or use this link to register as a user.
The most recent event-related content is usually restricted to ESCMID members, while registered users get access one year after the event. However, there are events such as ECCMID where attendees get priority access, no matter if they are members or registered users. In these cases, we may offer non-attendees access after paying a fee.
You may search by event name, session title or number, topic title or number or author – or by any keyword. To get the most relevant results, enter the title or name in quotation marks, e.g. "Pre-ECCMID Day on Diagnostics" or "John Doe". If no quotation marks are used, then the exact result is shown first, followed by less exact results.
You may further narrow the number of search results for most terms by applying one or several filters, using the filter window on the start page. The Category and Media Type filters work for any content. In contrast, the Date from / to filter may not apply for Publications and Guidelines. In addition, the information text below a webcast or document offers the option of filtering search results by session title, author, event or category.
We defined four "hot topic" terms that you may search for by clicking the four tiles on the start page.
Linking two or more search terms by AND will show all results containing these search terms. For example, if you are looking for results that contain both the terms viral and hospital, then enter viral AND hospital.
Link two or more search terms by OR to get all results that contain at least one of these terms. For example, if you want to get results that contain either viral or infections or COVID, then enter viral OR infections OR COVID.
Place + in front of the term that you want to be included in your search result and place - in front of the term that you do not want to be included – without blanks in between in either case. For example, if you are aiming for search results that contain viral and infection but do not contain COVID, then enter +viral +infections -COVID.
A search term preceded by an exclamation point (no blanks in between) will lead to all content that does not contain the term, e.g. !COVID.
Deselect the ticked boxes in the filter dropdowns, click "Clear" on the calendars in the Date from / to filter – or refresh the website to remove all filters at once. Additionally, you may clear all applied filters by using the relevant buttons right above the search results.
No, as copyright protection limits the viewing of video presentations to web browsers, they cannot be downloaded.
No, due to our privacy policy we cannot disclose any contact details of persons involved.