The Journal of Clinical Microbiology has a great tradition of publishing mini-reviews on topics that are important to the clinical microbiology community. Minireviews provide “up to the minute” updates on topics pertinent to clinical microbiologists and serve as fabulous training tools for medical professionals, trainees, and researchers across all disciplines. Dr. Humphries and Dr. Ledeboer discuss what makes a great mini-review, and their favorite mini-reviews published in JCM.
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Guest:
- Nathan Ledeboer, Ph.D.
- The Genotype-to-Phenotype Dilemma: How Should Laboratories Approach Discordant Susceptibility Results?
- Forty Years of Molecular Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases
- An update on novel taxa and revised taxonomic status of bacteria isolated from non-domestic animals described in 2022
- Valid and accepted novel bacterial taxa derived from human clinical specimens and taxonomic revisions published in 2022
- Update on North American tick-borne diseases and how to diagnose them
- Laboratory Diagnosis of COVID-19: Current Issues and Challenges
- Microbial Nomenclature: Updates and Issues
- The Use of Machine Learning for Image Analysis Artificial Intelligence in Clinical Microbiology
- Nanopore Sequencing for Mycobacterium tuberculosis: a Critical Review of the Literature, New Developments, and Future Opportunities
This episode of Editors in Conversation is brought to you by the Journal of Clinical Microbiology and hosted by JCM Editor in Chief, Romney Humphries, Ph.D., D(ABMM).
Visit journals.asm.org/journal/jcm to read articles and/or submit a manuscript.
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