Neonatal Sepsis: Prevention is Better Than Cure!

Main Article Content

Sukrita Dhaneria
Kirti Hemwani
Sonali Waske
Yogyata Marothi
Vinod Diwan

Abstract

The word sepsis, derived from the Greek word “sepo” meaning “I rot,” was first used medically in Homer’s poems. Also mentioned in the writings of Hippocrates around 400 BC, who thought of it as a dangerous biological decay in the body, sepsis has been the nightmare of a clinician ever since one can recall. Over the years, several definitions of sepsis have been deduced, and in 2016, an updated definition of sepsis was published, which stated that ‘sepsis is life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection.

Article Details

How to Cite
Dhaneria, S., Hemwani, K., Waske, S., Marothi, Y., & Diwan, V. . (2024). Neonatal Sepsis: Prevention is Better Than Cure!. Central India Journal of Medical Research, 3(03), 1–2. https://doi.org/10.58999/cijmr.v3i03.192
Section
Editorial
Author Biographies

Sukrita Dhaneria, Department of Microbiology, RD Gardi Medical College, Ujjain, madhya Pradesh, India.

Assistant Professor

Department of Microbiology

Kirti Hemwani, Department of Microbiology, RD Gardi Medical College, Ujjain, madhya Pradesh, India.

Associate Professor

Department of Microbiology

Sonali Waske, Department of Microbiology, RD Gardi Medical College, Ujjain, madhya Pradesh, India.

Associate Professor

Department of Microbiology

Yogyata Marothi, Department of Microbiology, RD Gardi Medical College, Ujjain, madhya Pradesh, India.

Professor and Head

Department of Microbiology

Vinod Diwan, Senior Professor Epidemiology Department of Global Public Health Karolinska Institute Stockholm, Sweden.

Senior Professor

Karolinska Institutet

Stockholm

Sweden