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Digital Health Resilience and Well-Being Interventions for Military Members, Veterans, and Public Safety Personnel: Environmental Scan and Quality Review

Digital Health Resilience and Well-Being Interventions for Military Members, Veterans, and Public Safety Personnel: Environmental Scan and Quality Review

This environmental scan aimed to provide a review and quality assessment of DMHIs, including apps (ie, mobile apps), RBs (ie, websites with resources and information), and WBPs (ie, interactive programs available on the web), recommended for military members, PSP, and veterans. Apps and WBPs are similar in that they are interactive resources that may include modules, questionnaires, audio or video information, and intervention-specific activities.

Rashell R Allen, Myrah A Malik, Carley Aquin, Lucijana Herceg, Suzette Brémault-Phillips, Phillip R Sevigny

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e64098

COVID-19 Testing Equity in New York City During the First 2 Years of the Pandemic: Demographic Analysis of Free Testing Data

COVID-19 Testing Equity in New York City During the First 2 Years of the Pandemic: Demographic Analysis of Free Testing Data

Approximately 6 million COVID-19 tests were completed by the NYC H+H between early 2020 and late 2022, though most testing was done following the first wave in 2020 due to the time and resources required to set up testing sites. In our analysis, the number of NYC H+H no-cost COVID-19 tests increased as the median income of a discrete neighborhood fell—a trend that stood in opposition to overall citywide testing trends, wherein the highest testing rates were observed in wealthier areas of the city.

Daniel Rosenfeld, Sean Brennan, Andrew Wallach, Theodore Long, Chris Keeley, Sarah Joseph Kurien

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2025;11:e52972

A Digital Mental Health Solution to Improve Social, Emotional, and Learning Skills for Youth: Protocol for an Efficacy and Usability Study

A Digital Mental Health Solution to Improve Social, Emotional, and Learning Skills for Youth: Protocol for an Efficacy and Usability Study

As stated previously, Neolth is a mobile app that provides tier 1 resources for emotional awareness, coping skills, health education, and stigma reduction. The study was designed to address the critical challenges in youth mental health care, leveraging the potential of digital and mobile mental health solutions.

Kayla V Taylor, Laurent Garchitorena, Carolina Scaramutti-Gladfelter, Mykayla Wyrick, Katherine B Grill, Azizi A Seixas

JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e59372

Parental Information-Use Strategies in a Digital Parenting Environment and Their Associations With Parental Social Support and Self-Efficacy: Cross-Sectional Study

Parental Information-Use Strategies in a Digital Parenting Environment and Their Associations With Parental Social Support and Self-Efficacy: Cross-Sectional Study

This suggests that parents with extensive social networks are likely to be more adept at using both online and offline information, with online resources supplementing face-to-face interactions. One outcome of effectively using parenting information to address parenting challenges is improved parenting self-efficacy, which is defined as parents’ beliefs about their ability to influence their children in ways that promote health and success [20].

Ryuta Onishi

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e58757

A Pilot Project to Promote Research Competency in Medical Students Through Journal Clubs: Mixed Methods Study

A Pilot Project to Promote Research Competency in Medical Students Through Journal Clubs: Mixed Methods Study

The educational materials for the project were meticulously selected based on the tutors’ personal experiences and an extensive review of available web-based resources. This process ensured that the materials were both relevant and of high educational quality. Following their initial briefing on project fundamentals and expectations, participants embarked on the first training module intended to acquaint them with research basics (Multimedia Appendix 1).

Mert Karabacak, Zeynep Ozcan, Burak Berksu Ozkara, Zeynep Sude Furkan, Sotirios Bisdas

JMIR Med Educ 2024;10:e51173

Integrating Health and Disability Data Into Academic Information Systems: Workflow Optimization Study

Integrating Health and Disability Data Into Academic Information Systems: Workflow Optimization Study

By adopting this systems model, the workflow design addressed core components such as accessibility, learning resources, and quality control. To enhance the design methodology, insights were incorporated from previous studies to provide a broader understanding of user requirements and system functionalities.

Abdulrahman Jabour

JMIR Hum Factors 2024;11:e54859

Implementation of the World Health Organization Minimum Dataset for Emergency Medical Teams to Create Disaster Profiles for the Indonesian SATUSEHAT Platform Using Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources: Development and Validation Study

Implementation of the World Health Organization Minimum Dataset for Emergency Medical Teams to Create Disaster Profiles for the Indonesian SATUSEHAT Platform Using Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources: Development and Validation Study

Next, we manually mapped these data elements onto the base resources. Based on the results, we conducted a gap analysis between the data elements and FHIR resources. We divided the EMT MDS elements into the medical record and daily reporting form, including the tick-box section. Next, we examined whether each data element and the FHIR base resources matched.

Hiro Putra Faisal, Masaharu Nakayama

JMIR Med Inform 2024;12:e59651

Diagnostic Accuracy of a Mobile AI-Based Symptom Checker and a Web-Based Self-Referral Tool in Rheumatology: Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

Diagnostic Accuracy of a Mobile AI-Based Symptom Checker and a Web-Based Self-Referral Tool in Rheumatology: Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

The low accuracy of DDSSs poses substantial challenges, as inaccurate diagnoses can cause misutilization of scarce health care resources, anxiety among patients, and frustration among health care professionals. Complementing subjective symptom descriptions by adding objective laboratory values obtained via self-sampling [27,28] could improve the accuracy of DDSS suggestions while preserving remote care advantages.

Johannes Knitza, Koray Tascilar, Franziska Fuchs, Jacob Mohn, Sebastian Kuhn, Daniela Bohr, Felix Muehlensiepen, Christina Bergmann, Hannah Labinsky, Harriet Morf, Elizabeth Araujo, Matthias Englbrecht, Wolfgang Vorbrüggen, Cay-Benedict von der Decken, Stefan Kleinert, Andreas Ramming, Jörg H W Distler, Peter Bartz-Bazzanella, Nicolas Vuillerme, Georg Schett, Martin Welcker, Axel Hueber

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e55542

Cost Evaluation of the Ontario Virtual Urgent Care Pilot Program: Population-Based, Matched Cohort Study

Cost Evaluation of the Ontario Virtual Urgent Care Pilot Program: Population-Based, Matched Cohort Study

Individual resident consent was not required to access and use provincial health care records for this study, as it was conducted at ICES, an independent, not-for-profit health services research institute whose legal status under Ontario’s Personal Health Information Protection Act authorizes it to collect personal health information, without consent, for the purposes of analysis or compiling statistical information with respect to the management of, evaluation or monitoring of, the allocation of resources to

Jean-Eric Tarride, Justin N Hall, Shawn Mondoux, Katie N Dainty, Joy McCarron, J Michael Paterson, Lesley Plumptre, Emily Borgundvaag, Howard Ovens, Shelley L McLeod

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e50483