Published on in Vol 6, No 12 (2022): December
Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are
available at
https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/40302, first published
.
![Continued Use of Contact-Tracing Apps in the United States and the United Kingdom: Insights From a Comparative Study Through the Lens of the Health Belief Model Continued Use of Contact-Tracing Apps in the United States and the United Kingdom: Insights From a Comparative Study Through the Lens of the Health Belief Model](https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/6dc4b9b4f04648070f5c5bf38a7aa3b6.png 480w,https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/6dc4b9b4f04648070f5c5bf38a7aa3b6.png 960w,https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/6dc4b9b4f04648070f5c5bf38a7aa3b6.png 1920w,https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/6dc4b9b4f04648070f5c5bf38a7aa3b6.png 2500w)
Journals
- Kuo K. Antecedents predicting digital contact tracing acceptance: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making 2023;23(1) View
- Dolezel M, Smutny Z. Adoption of a COVID-19 Contact Tracing App by Czech Youth: Cross-Cultural Replication Study. JMIR Human Factors 2023;10:e45481 View
- Funnell E, Martin-Key N, Benacek J, Spadaro B, Bahn S. Preferences for and intention to use an app for premenstrual mental health symptoms using the Health Behaviour Model (HBM). npj Women's Health 2024;2(1) View