C
Clinton K. Murray
Researcher at San Antonio Military Medical Center
Publications - 273
Citations - 13140
Clinton K. Murray is an academic researcher from San Antonio Military Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Acinetobacter baumannii. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 267 publications receiving 11786 citations. Previous affiliations of Clinton K. Murray include United States Department of the Army & Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
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Journal Article
Acute Traumatic Wound Management in the Prolonged Field Care Setting
Justin Rapp,Timothy P Plackett,Jonathan H. Crane,Jonathan Lu,Andrew B Hall,David Hardin,Paul E Loos,Rick Kelly,Clinton K. Murray,Sean Keenan,Stacy Shackelford +10 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Antibiotic Treatment - What Can Be Learned from Point of Injury Experience?
Avi Benov,Avi Benov,Ben Antebi,Joseph C. Wenke,Andriy I. Batchinsky,Clinton K. Murray,Dean Nachman,Dean Nachman,Paran Haim,Bader Tarif,Bader Tarif,Elon Glassberg,Avi Yitzhak +12 more
TL;DR: Although the reasons for poor adherence to IDF CPG's are not entirely clear, the data suggest that the severity of the injuries sustained by these casualties requiring a greater number of LSIs, longer evacuation distances, and a more hostile battlefield environment may each contribute to poor adherence.
Journal ArticleDOI
Description of Streptococcus pneumoniae infections in burn patients
Jessie S. Glasser,Michael L. Landrum,Michael L. Landrum,Kevin K. Chung,Kevin K. Chung,Duane R. Hospenthal,Duane R. Hospenthal,Duane R. Hospenthal,Evan M. Renz,Evan M. Renz,Steven E. Wolf,Steven E. Wolf,Clinton K. Murray,Clinton K. Murray,Clinton K. Murray +14 more
TL;DR: Pneumococcal disease is not common in burn patients and generally occurs early on in hospitalization after burn making it more likely to be a community-acquired pathogen rather than nosocomial in the burn population.
Book ChapterDOI
Biofilms and wound infection research in the US military
TL;DR: Investigations conducted by the US military medical research community into wound infections occurring in casualties from conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan are detailed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hepatitis B seroprevalence in the U.S. military and its impact on potential screening strategies.
Paul T. Scott,Robert L. Cohen,Robert L. Cohen,David M. Brett-Major,Shilpa Hakre,Shilpa Hakre,Jennifer A. Malia,Jason F. Okulicz,Charmagne G. Beckett,Jason M Blaylock,Michael A. Forgione,Stephen A. Harrison,Clinton K. Murray,Francisco J. Rentas,Roland L. Fahie,Adam W. Armstrong,Aatif M. Hayat,Laura A. Pacha,Peter Dawson,Beth Blackwell,Angelia A Eick-Cost,Angelia A Eick-Cost,Hala H Maktabi,Nelson L. Michael,Linda L. Jagodzinski,Steven B. Cersovsky,Sheila A. Peel +26 more
TL;DR: Screening forHBV infection at service entry would potentially reduce chronic HBV infection in the force, decrease the threat of transfusion-transmitted HBV infections in the battlefield blood supply, and lead to earlier diagnosis and linkage to care; however, applicant screening is not cost saving.