Dr. Megan B Murray MD
Infectious Disease Specialist | Infectious Disease
55 Fruit Street Cox 5 Boston MA, 02114About
Dr. Megan Murray is an infectious disease specialist practicing in Boston, MA. Dr. Murray specializes in infections that are difficult to diagnose or unresponsive to treatments, such as HIV or airborne infections from a foreign country. Infectious disease specialists usually work with conditions that are not treatable by a primary physician but it is important to keep contact with the primary physician in order to receive information about the patients history and for deciding which diagnostic tests are appropriate.
Education and Training
Harvard Med Sch, Boston Ma 1990
Harvard Medical School 1990
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Molecular epidemiology and the dynamics of tuberculosis transmission among foreign-born people.
- Multiple equilibria: tuberculosis transmission require unrealistic assumptions.
- Modeling bacterial evolution with comparative-genome-based marker systems: application to Mycobacterium tuberculosis evolution and pathogenesis.
- Isoniazid resistance and the future of drug-resistant tuberculosis.
- Cost-effectiveness of alternative blood-screening strategies for West Nile Virus in the United States.
- Blood screening for west nile virus: the cost-effectiveness of a real-time, trigger-based strategy.
- Risk factors and mortality associated with default from multidrug-resistant tuberculosis treatment.
- Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of active tuberculosis: a systematic review of 13 observational studies.
- Tuberculosis drug resistance mutation database.
- Defining the research agenda to reduce the joint burden of disease from diabetes mellitus and tuberculosis.
- Treatment outcomes among patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis: systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Recurrence after treatment for pulmonary multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
- Bi-directional screening for tuberculosis and diabetes: a systematic review.
- Diabetes mellitus and tuberculosis in countries with high tuberculosis burdens: individual risks and social determinants.
- Effectiveness of early antiretroviral therapy initiation to improve survival among HIV-infected adults with tuberculosis: a retrospective cohort study.
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