Clinical databases typically contain a significant amount of temporal information, information that is often crucial in medical decision-support systems. Most recent clinical information systems use the relational model when working with this information. Although these systems have reasonably well-defined semantics for temporal queries on a single relational table, many do not fully address the complex semantics of operations involving multiple temporal tables. Such operations can arise frequently in queries on clinical databases. This paper describes the issues encountered when joining a set of temporal tables, and outlines how such joins are far more complex than their non-temporal equivalents. We describe the semantics of temporal joins in a query management system called Chronus II, a system we have developed to assist in evaluating patients for clinical trials.