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Joshua D. Hartzell

Researcher at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center

Publications -  65
Citations -  1941

Joshua D. Hartzell is an academic researcher from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Graduate medical education & Curriculum. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1699 citations. Previous affiliations of Joshua D. Hartzell include Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences & Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

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Nephrotoxicity Associated with Intravenous Colistin (Colistimethate Sodium) Treatment at a Tertiary Care Medical Center

TL;DR: The incidence of acute renal failure, defined by the risk, injury, or failure criteria of the RIFLE criteria, in 66 patients who received colistimethate sodium was 45%, and 21% of patients stopped therapy because of nephrotoxicity.

Diagnosis and management of Q fever--United States, 2013: recommendations from CDC and the Q Fever Working Group

TL;DR: The first national recommendations issued by CDC for Q fever recognition, clinical and laboratory diagnosis, treatment, management, and reporting for health-care personnel and public health professionals are provided.
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Q Fever: Epidemiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment

TL;DR: Military and civilian health care professionals need to consider Q fever when evaluating patients with appropriate geographic exposures and clinical presentations to prevent delays in diagnosis and treatment.
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Impact of depression on HIV outcomes in the HAART era

TL;DR: The objective of the current paper is to review the available literature on the impact of MHI on HIV outcomes in the HAART era and determine whether mental health illness and specifically depression are associated with worse outcomes.
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Infectious complications of damage control orthopedics in war trauma.

TL;DR: The U.S. Army policy for war-related fractures is to immediately external fixation of fractures, followed by internal fixation when the patient is medically stabilized (damage control orthopedics [DCO]) as discussed by the authors.