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Abstract 


Advances in genomic technologies have revolutionised practices for hospital infection prevention and control programmes. In this Personal View, we describe a genomic epidemiology service called the Rapid Response (RR) programme at University of California, San Francisco, a large academic medical centre. In collaboration with the hospital infection-prevention team, the RR programme uses whole-genome sequencing and metagenomic next-generation sequencing for outbreak investigations, special interest analyses of emerging pathogens, and surveillance of high-priority microbes. Over 7 years (2017-24), the RR programme conducted a diversity of outbreak investigations and other analyses; most investigations ruled out transmission, and the rapid turnaround of genomic results averted further resource-intensive work. Longitudinal surveillance enabled early detection of changing incidence trends and guided timely infection-prevention responses. Our experiences with the RR programme build upon growing evidence that genomic epidemiology programmes enhance hospital infection prevention and control, augment priority pathogen surveillance, and improve patient safety.

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