Enhancing capacity for national genomics surveillance of antimicrobial resistance in public health laboratories in Kenya
Collins Kigen, Angela Muraya, Cecilia Kyanya, Leonard Kingwara, Onesmus Mmboyi, Tiffany Hamm, Lillian Musila- General Medicine
Genomic surveillance is vital for detecting outbreaks and understanding the epidemiology and transmission of bacterial strains, yet it is not integrated into many national antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance programmes. Key factors are that few scientists in the public health sector are trained in bacterial genomics, and the diverse sequencing platforms and bioinformatic tools make it challenging to generate reproducible outputs. In Kenya, these gaps were addressed by training public health scientists to conduct genomic surveillance on isolates from the national AMR surveillance repository and produce harmonized reports. The 2-week training combined theory and laboratory and bioinformatic experiences with