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Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 805 Journal of Medical Internet Research
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Although not statistically significant, there was a moderate difference on the total Stim Q2 READ scale between group 1 (ie, those who completed the program) and group 2 (ie, those who had not yet begun; Cohen d=0.55; P=.23). However, there were large and statistically significant differences between the groups on the quantity and quality subdomains (Cohen d=1.01; P=.04 and Cohen d=0.99; P=.02). By contrast, the between-group difference on the PVR scale was small and not statistically significant (P=.75).
JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e60764
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Continuous Glucose Monitoring in Primary Care: Multidisciplinary Pilot Implementation Study
JMIR Diabetes 2025;10:e69061
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Falleti et al [21] reported an effect size of d=0.6 in an N-back task following a similar level of alcohol consumption. Setting power at 0.8 and α at P=.05, the calculated sample size was N=32. Peterson et al [30] reported an effect size of d=0.3 on a delayed paired association task after alcohol consumption. With power set at 0.8 and α at P=.05, the calculated sample size was N=22.
Participants were screened as part of the online recruitment process.
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e55469
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Recommendations for Successful Development and Implementation of Digital Health Technology Tools
Each numbered step corresponds to a specific recommendation and is accompanied by letter codes indicating the stakeholders directly involved in the project—P: patients and advocacy groups; H: health care providers; R: researchers; D: developers and engineers; M: project managers; B: regulatory bodies and policymakers. The workflow progresses from left to right, with arrows indicating the primary flow between phases.
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e56747
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A subset of care partner members (n=18) completed anonymous surveys on their experience with the network, including 13 engaged members (who signed in to the network at least once in the prior 90 d), 1 inactive member (who had not signed in to the network within the prior 90 d), and 4 members responding from an anonymous link provided on the website.
JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e70206
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MCA trend (V1 A) visualizations for patient X using MICE imputation for the 5 survey sections, namely, (A) mood, (B) sleep, (C) social, (D) anxiety, and (E) psychosis. The anomalous points with high-frequency spikes coincide within a month leading to relapse. This chart is generated from the anonymized data of the patient from the Bangalore cohort collected during 2021-2022 in the SHARP project [5]. The clinicians logged a relapse in April 2022 for this patient.
JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e70073
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