Nurses are part of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Team
Nurses are part of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Team
Active engagement of nurses in antimicrobial stewardship activities is long-overdue. We can all appreciate the nursing presence in management of antimicrobials in different clinical settings, however there is little to no evidence that supports nurses as antimicrobial stewards. This is partly due to barriers, and knowledge gaps that currently exist in nursing practice. We have created nursing resources to help address some of the knowledge gaps that currently exist.
Active engagement of nurses in antimicrobial stewardship activities is long-overdue. We can all appreciate the nursing presence in management of antimicrobials in different clinical settings, however there is little to no evidence that supports nurses as antimicrobial stewards. This is partly due to barriers, and knowledge gaps that currently exist in nursing practice. We have created nursing resources to help address some of the knowledge gaps that currently exist.

Dr. Jennie Johnstone, MD PhD FRCPC
Physician Co-Lead, Infection Prevention and Control
Sinai Health
Assistant Professor, Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology and
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
University of Toronto
jennie.johnstone@sinaihealth.ca
T: 416-586-4800 x 8358
Dr. Johnstone obtained her medical degree from Dalhousie University. She then moved to Edmonton, Alberta, where she completed her Internal Medicine and Infectious Disease training at the University of Alberta. Following her residency, she completed a clinical research fellowship in Edmonton. She moved to Hamilton in July 2008, where she practiced Infectious Diseases at McMaster University and completed her PhD in Health Research Methodology (Epidemiology). Following her PhD, she joined Public Health Ontario as an Infection Prevention and Control physician, where she continues to lead research focused on Infection Prevention and Control in the areas of vancomycin resistant enterococci, ventilator associated pneumonia and Clostridium difficile. She worked at St. Joseph's Health Centre in Toronto for five years, where she practiced Infectious Diseases and ran the Infection Prevention and Control program. In 2018, she left St. Joseph's to become a physician co-lead of Infection Prevention and Control at Sinai Health in Toronto, where she is also an Assistant Professor in the Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology and Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto.