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An Online Family Literacy and Wellness Program for Latino Dual Language Learners: Pilot Randomized Waitlist Controlled Trial

An Online Family Literacy and Wellness Program for Latino Dual Language Learners: Pilot Randomized Waitlist Controlled Trial

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).

Kevin D Guerrero, Lucia Lakata, Daniel Lima, Caroline Mendoza, Nila Uthirasamy, Lesley M Morrow, Silvia Perez-Cortes, Maria Pellerano, Alicja Bator, Pamela Ohman Strickland, Benjamin F Crabtree, Manuel E Jimenez

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e60764

Temporal Dynamics of Subtle Cognitive Change: Validation of a User-Friendly Multidomain Digital Assessment Using an Alcohol Challenge

Temporal Dynamics of Subtle Cognitive Change: Validation of a User-Friendly Multidomain Digital Assessment Using an Alcohol Challenge

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.

John Frederick Dyer, Florentine Marie Barbey, Ayan Ghoshal, Ann Marie Hake, Bryan J Hansen, Md Nurul Islam, Judith Jaeger, Rouba Kozak, Hugh Marston, Mark Moss, Viet Nguyen, Rebecca Louise Quinn, Leslie A Shinobu, Elizabeth Tunbridge, Brian Murphy, Niamh Kennedy

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e55469

Recommendations for Successful Development and Implementation of Digital Health Technology Tools

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.

Rebecca Ting Jiin Loo, Francesco Nasta, Mirco Macchi, Anaïs Baudot, Frada Burstein, Riley Bove, Maike Greve, Holger Fröhlich, Sara Khalid, Arne Küderle, Susan L Moore, Valerie Storms, John Torous, Enrico Glaab

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e56747

Feasibility and Usability of a Web-Based Peer Support Network for Care Partners of People With Serious Illness (ConnectShareCare): Observational Study

Feasibility and Usability of a Web-Based Peer Support Network for Care Partners of People With Serious Illness (ConnectShareCare): Observational Study

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.

Aricca D Van Citters, Megan M Holthoff, Colleen Young, Sarah M Eck, Amelia M Cullinan, Stephanie Carney, Elizabeth A O'Donnell, Joel R King, Malavika Govindan, David Gustafson, Stephanie C Tomlin, Anne B Holmes, Ann D Bradley, Brant J Oliver, Matthew M Wilson, Eugene C Nelson, Amber E Barnato, Kathryn B Kirkland

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e70206

mindLAMPVis as a Co-Designed Clinician-Facing Data Visualization Portal to Integrate Clinical Observations From Digital Phenotyping in Schizophrenia: User-Centered Design Process and Pilot Implementation

mindLAMPVis as a Co-Designed Clinician-Facing Data Visualization Portal to Integrate Clinical Observations From Digital Phenotyping in Schizophrenia: User-Centered Design Process and Pilot Implementation

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.

Karthik Sama, Jaya Sreevalsan-Nair, Soumya Choudhary, Srilakshmi Nagendra, Preethi V Reddy, Asher Cohen, Urvakhsh Meherwan Mehta, John Torous

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e70073