Published on in Vol 24, No 9 (2022): September

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/38497, first published .
Preliminary Investigation of Shift, a Novel Smartphone App to Support Junior Doctors’ Mental Health and Well-being: Examination of Symptom Progression, Usability, and Acceptability After 1 Month of Use

Preliminary Investigation of Shift, a Novel Smartphone App to Support Junior Doctors’ Mental Health and Well-being: Examination of Symptom Progression, Usability, and Acceptability After 1 Month of Use

Preliminary Investigation of Shift, a Novel Smartphone App to Support Junior Doctors’ Mental Health and Well-being: Examination of Symptom Progression, Usability, and Acceptability After 1 Month of Use

Journals

  1. Huang C. Underrecognition and undertreatment of stress-related psychiatric disorders in physicians: Determinants, challenges, and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. World Journal of Psychiatry 2023;13(4):131 View
  2. Ribaut J, DeVito Dabbs A, Dobbels F, Teynor A, Mess E, Hoffmann T, De Geest S. Developing a Comprehensive List of Criteria to Evaluate the Characteristics and Quality of eHealth Smartphone Apps: Systematic Review. JMIR mHealth and uHealth 2024;12:e48625 View
  3. Herold M, Simbula S, Gallucci M. Can smartphone applications and wearable technologies improve workplace well-being and help manage stress? A systematic review. Current Psychology 2024;43(36):28650 View
  4. Manning J, Blandford A, Edbrooke-Childs J. Facilitators of and Barriers to Teachers’ Engagement With Consumer Technologies for Stress Management: Qualitative Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2024;26:e50457 View
  5. Lai L, Sanatkar S, Mackinnon A, Deady M, Petrie K, Lipscomb R, Counson I, Francis-Taylor R, Dean K, Harvey S. Testing the Effectiveness of a Mobile Smartphone App Designed to Improve the Mental Health of Junior Physicians: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Research Protocols 2024;13:e58288 View