WHONET.Rd
This example data set has the exact same structure as an export file from WHONET. Such files can be used with this package, as this example data set shows. The data itself was based on our septic_patients
data set.
WHONET
A data.frame
with 500 observations and 53 variables:
Identification number
ID of the sample
Specimen number
ID of the specimen
Organism
Name of the microorganism. Before analysis, you should transform this to a valid microbial class, using as.mo
.
Country
Country of origin
Laboratory
Name of laboratory
Last name
Last name of patient
First name
Initial of patient
Sex
Gender of patient
Age
Age of patient
Age category
Age group, can also be looked up using age_groups
Date of admission
Date of hospital admission
Specimen date
Date when specimen was received at laboratory
Specimen type
Specimen type or group
Specimen type (Numeric)
Translation of "Specimen type"
Reason
Reason of request with Differential Diagnosis
Isolate number
ID of isolate
Organism type
Type of microorganism, can also be looked up using mo_type
Serotype
Serotype of microorganism
Beta-lactamase
Microorganism produces beta-lactamase?
ESBL
Microorganism produces extended spectrum beta-lactamase?
Carbapenemase
Microorganism produces carbapenemase?
MRSA screening test
Microorganism is possible MRSA?
Inducible clindamycin resistance
Clindamycin can be induced?
Comment
Other comments
Date of data entry
Date this data was entered in WHONET
AMP_ND10:CIP_EE
27 different antibiotics. You can lookup the abbreviatons in the antibiotics
data set, or use e.g. atc_name("AMP")
to get the official name immediately. Before analysis, you should transform this to a valid antibiotic class, using as.rsi
.
On our website https://msberends.gitlab.io/AMR you can find a comprehensive tutorial about how to conduct AMR analysis, the complete documentation of all functions (which reads a lot easier than here in R) and an example analysis using WHONET data.