Published on in Vol 7 (2023)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/52454, first published .
Establishing the Need for Anticipatory Symptom Guidance and Networked Models of Disease in Adaptive Family Management Among Children With Medical Complexity: Qualitative Study

Establishing the Need for Anticipatory Symptom Guidance and Networked Models of Disease in Adaptive Family Management Among Children With Medical Complexity: Qualitative Study

Establishing the Need for Anticipatory Symptom Guidance and Networked Models of Disease in Adaptive Family Management Among Children With Medical Complexity: Qualitative Study

Journals

  1. Cook S, Hall M, Stringfellow I, Berry J. Health care utilization after enrollment in an outpatient structured clinical program for children with medical complexity. Paediatrics & Child Health 2024;29(6):354 View
  2. Keim-Malpass J, Muir K, Letzkus L, Scheer E, Valdez R. Examining the Spillover Economic Impacts of Caregiving Among Families of Children With Medical Complexity to Inform Inclusive Economic Models: Qualitative Study. Journal of Participatory Medicine 2024;16:e60666 View
  3. Gula A, MacDonell-Yilmaz R, Guyer D. A Kid at Heart: Applying Pediatric Skills to Caring for Adults. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 2025 View
  4. Kim K, Kim E, Seo H, Gong M, Lee H, Kwon S, Choi E. Caregiver priorities and healthcare outcomes in a pediatric home care service for children with medical complexity: a quasi-experimental study. European Journal of Pediatrics 2026;185(1) View