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N. Clay Mann
Researcher at University of Utah
Publications - 152
Citations - 5929
N. Clay Mann is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: Emergency medical services & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 133 publications receiving 5075 citations. Previous affiliations of N. Clay Mann include University of Texas Medical Branch & University of Michigan.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Influence of a Statewide Trauma System on Location of Hospitalization and Outcome of Injured Patients
Richard J. Mullins,Judith Veum-Stone,Jerris R. Hedges,Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck,N. Clay Mann,Patricia Southard,Mark Helfand,John A. Gaines,Donald D. Trunkey +8 more
TL;DR: The Oregon trauma system was successfully implemented with more patients with index injuries admitted to hospitals judged most capable of managing trauma patients, and theOregon trauma system also appears beneficial since trauma system establishment is associated with a statewide reduction in risk of death.
Journal ArticleDOI
Age and sex differences in presentation of symptoms among patients with acute coronary disease: the REACT trial
Robert J. Goldberg,David C. Goff,Lawton S. Cooper,Russell V. Luepker,Jane G. Zapka,Vera Bittner,Stavroula K. Osganian,Darleen M. Lessard,Carol E. Cornell,Angela Meshack,N. Clay Mann,Janice Gilliland,Henry A. Feldman +12 more
TL;DR: There are differences between symptoms at presentation of men and women, and those in various age groups, hospitalized with acute coronary disease, and Clinicians should be aware of these differences when diagnosing and managing patients suspected to have coronary heart disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Relationship of cerebral perfusion pressure and survival in pediatric brain-injured patients.
Cynthia Downard,Frieda Hulka,Richard J. Mullins,Joseph H. Piatt,Randall M. Chesnut,Peter Quint,N. Clay Mann,Max L. Ramenofsky,Dennis W. Vane +8 more
TL;DR: In children with survivable brain injury (mean CPP > 40 mm Hg), CPP did not stratify patients for risk of adverse outcome, and low mean CPP was lethal.
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The Cost Of Overtriage: More Than One-Third Of Low-Risk Injured Patients Were Taken To Major Trauma Centers
Craig D. Newgard,Kristan Staudenmayer,Renee Y. Hsia,N. Clay Mann,Eileen M. Bulger,James F. Holmes,Ross J. Fleischman,Kyle Gorman,Jason S. Haukoos,K. John McConnell +9 more
TL;DR: Adhering to field triage guidelines that minimize the overtriage of low-risk injured patients to major trauma centers could save up to $136.7 million annually in the seven regions the authors studied.
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A randomized controlled trial to assess decay in acquired knowledge among paramedics completing a pediatric resuscitation course.
TL;DR: Pediatric clinical knowledge rose sharply immediately after the course but returned to baseline levels within six months, and there was no difference between the groups in knowledge scores at 12 months, despite the interventions at six months.