Professor Paul Turner
Contact information
Podcast interview
Improving data for infection management
The ACORN project gathers clinical, microbiology, and antibiotic use data from nine countries in Asia and Africa to understand the burden and impact of antibiotic resistance on patient treatment and outcomes. It aims to improve direct patient care, generate treatment guidelines, and inform interventions to combat antibiotic resistance globally, ensuring better antibiotics for all.
Paul Turner
MB BS, PhD, FRCPCH, FRCPath
Professor of Paediatric Microbiology
- Senior Clinical Research Fellow
- Consultant in Microbiology
- Director of the Cambodia Oxford Medical Research Unit
- Principal Investigator for the ACORN Clinical AMR Surveillance Network
Clinical microbiologist with a focus on paediatric infections
Paul Turner is based at the Cambodia-Oxford Medical Research Unit (COMRU), Angkor Hospital for Children in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
He co-leads the ACORN clinical AMR surveillance network with OUCRU-Hanoi's Rogier van Doorn.
His research interests include:
- Antimicrobial resistance surveillance and control;
- Paediatric healthcare associated infections;
- Pneumococcal colonisation and disease and the impact of pneumococcal vaccines;
- Utilisation of bacterial colonisation data.
His non-research work focuses on development of human and laboratory capacity for diagnostic microbiology in low-resource settings, with a focus on improving laboratory informatics.
Recent publications
Interrupted time-series analysis of nationwide surveillance in Thai adult pneumococcal diseases over 14 years: evidence to inform policy in resource-limited countries
Journal article
Ngamprasertchai T. et al, (2026), Expert Review of Vaccines, 25
Predicting referral need for febrile children in low-resource community settings in South and Southeast Asia.
Journal article
Chandna A. et al, (2026), Nat Med
Bacterial culture practices and views on antimicrobial resistance among hospital physicians in Africa and Asia: ACORN2 KAP survey
Journal article
Hopkins J. et al, (2026), Wellcome Open Research, 11, 227 - 227
Age distribution of respiratory syncytial virus disease in children younger than 5 years in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Journal article
Mahmud S. et al, (2026), The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, 10, 245 - 254
Prospects and perils of antimicrobial resistance cluster detection using routinely collected data: an illustration from tertiary hospitals in Thailand representing different data contexts
Journal article
Rangsiwutisak C. et al, (2026), Journal of Hospital Infection, 170, 48 - 59