Search Articles

View query in Help articles search

Search Results (1 to 10 of 533 Results)

Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS


Virtual Patients Using Large Language Models: Scalable, Contextualized Simulation of Clinician-Patient Dialogue With Feedback

Virtual Patients Using Large Language Models: Scalable, Contextualized Simulation of Clinician-Patient Dialogue With Feedback

This was due to more back-and-forth turns in the dialogue (mean 37 vs 14 turns), because each time GPT processes a clinician statement (eg, even a short query like “Do you have heartburn?”), the entire dialogue is resubmitted to GPT as context. The average time for the 12 GPT-GPT (ie, self-chat) conversations was 113 seconds: 62 seconds for the clinician, and 51 seconds for the VP. The average cost was US $0.29 because these dialogues had fewer turns (mean 21 turns).

David A Cook, Joshua Overgaard, V Shane Pankratz, Guilherme Del Fiol, Chris A Aakre

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e68486

Lung Cancer Screening in Family Members and Peers of Patients With Lung Cancer: Protocol for a Prospective Cohort Study

Lung Cancer Screening in Family Members and Peers of Patients With Lung Cancer: Protocol for a Prospective Cohort Study

Health literacy is assessed with the 3-item Brief Health Literacy Screen [29] questions: “How often do you have someone help you read hospital materials?” “How confident are you filling out medical forms by yourself?” and “How often do you have problems learning about your condition because of difficulty understanding written information?” rated on 5-point Likert scales.

Isabelle Pitrou, Adriano Petrangelo, Charlotte Besson, Carmela Pepe, Annika Helen Waschke, Jason Agulnik, Anne V Gonzalez, Nicole Ezer

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e58529

Supporting Physical and Mental Health in Rural Veterans Living With Heart Failure: Protocol for a Nurse-Led Telephone Intervention Study

Supporting Physical and Mental Health in Rural Veterans Living With Heart Failure: Protocol for a Nurse-Led Telephone Intervention Study

The 39-item Self-Care of Heart Failure Index v 7.2 measures HF self-care across 4 subscales: self-care maintenance, symptom perception, symptom management, and self-efficacy (α=.73-.88 across all subscales) [27,28]. Scores are standardized (0-100), with higher scores on each subscale suggesting better self-care principles. Scores ≥70 on each subscale are considered adequate; improvement of ≥8 is considered clinically significant [27]. HF symptoms are measured using the Heart Failure Symptom Survey.

Lucinda J Graven, Laurie Abbott, Josef V Hodgkins, Thomas Ledermann, M Bryant Howren

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e63498

New Perspective on Digital Well-Being by Distinguishing Digital Competency From Dependency: Network Approach

New Perspective on Digital Well-Being by Distinguishing Digital Competency From Dependency: Network Approach

“How often do you give in to a desire to use social media even though your social media use at that particular moment makes you delay other things you want or need to do?” [Reverse coded] “I lose track of time online.” “I feel lost if I can’t go online.” “I’ve been thinking hard about what steps to take.” “I’ve been making fun of the situation.” “I’ve been turning to work or other activities to take my mind off things.” “Someone made rude or mean comments about you or threatened you in some way online.”

Si Chen, Omid V Ebrahimi, Cecilia Cheng

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e70483

Vaping, Acculturation, and Social Media Use Among Mexican American College Students: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Web-Based Cohort Study

Vaping, Acculturation, and Social Media Use Among Mexican American College Students: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Web-Based Cohort Study

As another example, we added response options such as “I do not know” or “neutral,” along with time frames such as “When you were younger?” or “currently” to some acculturation measures. Moreover, we amended and will continue to amend items that are and are not included in subsequent waves in response to findings from the baseline survey wave.

Bara S Bataineh, C Nathan Marti, Dhiraj Murthy, David Badillo, Sherman Chow, Alexandra Loukas, Anna V Wilkinson

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e63584

The Interactive Care Coordination and Navigation mHealth Intervention for People Experiencing Homelessness: Cost Analysis, Exploratory Financial Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Budget Impact Analysis

The Interactive Care Coordination and Navigation mHealth Intervention for People Experiencing Homelessness: Cost Analysis, Exploratory Financial Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Budget Impact Analysis

We used a public-payer perspective, assuming that the majority of people experiencing homelessness do not have private health insurance and cannot pay for out-of-pocket health care costs [26,27]. Thus, the costs of i CAN and health care services used by people experiencing homelessness are borne by the public sector through public health care payers (eg, Medicaid), health care systems, and local governments. We collected expenditure records from the ongoing i CAN RCT to determine intervention costs.

Hannah P McCullough, Leticia R Moczygemba, Anton L V Avanceña, James O Baffoe

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e64973

Measuring Mental Health in 2 Brazilian University Centers: Protocol for a Cohort Survey

Measuring Mental Health in 2 Brazilian University Centers: Protocol for a Cohort Survey

The platform provides a convenient “survey queue” for participants to access the survey questionnaires and a “to-do list” so they can keep track of their progress. This allows for the tracking of initial participation, completeness status, and longitudinal data collection for all participants. The REDCap feature best suited to address automation of the communication process and is, furthermore, better at data collection is the automated invitations.

Talita Di Santi, Ariana Gomes Nascimento, Pedro Fukuti, Vinnie Marchisio, Gian Carlo Araujo do Amaral, Camille Figueiredo Peternella Vaz, Luiz David Finotti Carrijo, Lilian Cristie de Oliveira, Luiz Octávio da Costa, Elisângela Mancini Marion Konieczniak, Luana Aparecida Zuppi Garcia, Vanessa Cristina Cabrelon Jusevicius, Eduardo de Castro Humes, Paulo Rossi Menezes, Euripedes Miguel, Arthur Caye

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e63636

Oncology Provider and Patient Perspectives on a Cardiovascular Health Assessment Tool Used During Posttreatment Survivorship Care in Community Oncology (Results from WF-1804CD): Mixed Methods Observational Study

Oncology Provider and Patient Perspectives on a Cardiovascular Health Assessment Tool Used During Posttreatment Survivorship Care in Community Oncology (Results from WF-1804CD): Mixed Methods Observational Study

Over 85% of survivors do not meet the American Heart Association’s healthy standards in multiple CVH components (BMI, physical activity, diet, smoking, blood pressure, cholesterol, and glucose) [7,19], many of which increase the risk for both cardiovascular disease and cancer [8,20]. Accordingly, better CVH among survivors is associated with improved survival [21] and reduced risk of both cardiovascular disease [20,22,23] and cancer recurrence [12-14].

Chandylen L Nightingale, Emily V Dressler, Maura Kepper, Heidi D Klepin, Simon Craddock Lee, Sydney Smith, Aylin Aguilar, Kimberly D Wiseman, Stephanie J Sohl, Brian J Wells, Joseph A DeMari, Alyssa Throckmorton, Lindsey W Kulbacki, Jenny Hanna, Randi E Foraker, Kathryn E Weaver

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e65152

Therapeutic Guidelines for the Self-Management of Major Depressive Disorder: Scoping Review

Therapeutic Guidelines for the Self-Management of Major Depressive Disorder: Scoping Review

Thus, classification I was assigned to systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomized clinical trials, classification II was assigned to randomized clinical trials, classification III was assigned to nonrandomized controlled trials, classification IV was assigned to case-control or cohort studies, classification V was assigned to systematic reviews of qualitative or descriptive studies, classification VI was assigned to qualitative or descriptive studies, and classification VII was assigned to opinions of

Priscila de Campos Tibúrcio, Priscila Maria Marcheti, Daniela Miori Pascon, Marco Antônio Montebello Junior, Maria Alzete de Lima, Carla Sílvia Fernandes, Célia Samarina Vilaça de Brito Santos, Maria do Perpétuo Socorro de Sousa Nóbrega

Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e63959