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Food Access in New York City During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Social Media Monitoring Study

Food Access in New York City During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Social Media Monitoring Study

The second most populated theme was “public assistance programs,” which included any tweets related to programs such as SNAP and pandemic electronic benefit transfer (P-EBT). Figure 2 shows that these conversations increased quickly in the early months of the pandemic, when SNAP benefits were temporarily increased for all recipients after passage by the US Congress of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act in April 2020 [43], but tweets tapered off by June 2020.

Leah Butz, Charles Platkin, Jonathan Chin, Juan Pablo Chavez Salas, Ellie Serres, May May Leung

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e49520

SEARCH Study: Text Messages and Automated Phone Reminders for HPV Vaccination in Uganda: Randomized Controlled Trial

SEARCH Study: Text Messages and Automated Phone Reminders for HPV Vaccination in Uganda: Randomized Controlled Trial

There was no significant difference in requested mode based on HPV vaccine dose or language (desired text messages for initiation reminders (22/39, 56%), versus for completion reminders (26/39, 67%; P=.35), desired text messages for reminders in English (21/28, 75%) versus in Luganda (27/50, 54%; P=.07). Enrollment flow diagram. Characteristics of study participants. a HPV: human papillomavirus. b KCCA: Kampala Capital City Authority.

Sabrina B Kitaka, Joseph Rujumba, Sarah K Zalwango, Betsy Pfeffer, Lubega Kizza, Juliane P Nattimba, Ashley B Stephens, Nicolette Nabukeera-Barungi, Chelsea S Wynn, Juliet N Babirye, John Mukisa, Ezekiel Mupere, Melissa S Stockwell

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e63527

Improving Diet Quality of People Living With Obesity by Building Effective Dietetic Service Delivery Using Technology in a Primary Health Care Setting: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Improving Diet Quality of People Living With Obesity by Building Effective Dietetic Service Delivery Using Technology in a Primary Health Care Setting: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

P values A sample size of 342 participants (n=171 per group) will have 90% power to detect a difference in change between arms of at least 5% of body weight at 12 months between groups, using a conservative estimate of SD, at 90% power and 5% level of significance. Assuming 20% (n=86) of participants are not followed up, this would necessitate 430 (215 in each group) participants to be recruited.

Deborah A Kerr, Clare E Collins, Andrea Begley, Barbara Mullan, Satvinder S Dhaliwal, Claire E Pulker, Fengqing Zhu, Marie Fialkowski, Richard L Prince, Richard Norman, Anthony P James, Paul Aveyard, Helen Mitchell, Jacquie Garton-Smith, Megan E Rollo, Chloe Maxwell-Smith, Amira Hassan, Hayley Breare, Lucy M Butcher, Christina M Pollard

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e64735

Effect of a Digital Health Exercise Program on the Intention for Spinal Surgery in Adult Spinal Deformity: Exploratory Cross-Sectional Survey

Effect of a Digital Health Exercise Program on the Intention for Spinal Surgery in Adult Spinal Deformity: Exploratory Cross-Sectional Survey

The mean (SD) intent for surgery scores before compared to after SRT were 1.29 (0.53) and 1.14 (0.35), respectively (mean difference 0.15 [P=.006]; Table 3). Participants with “No Intent” for spinal surgery pre- versus postuse of SRT (42/56 versus 48/56, respectively) corresponded to an absolute risk reduction of 11% and a number needed to treat of 9 to potentially avert 1 spinal fusion (1 divided by 0.11).

Marsalis Christian Brown, Christopher Quincy Lin, Christopher Jin, Matthew Rohde, Brett Rocos, Jonathan Belding, Barrett I Woods, Stacey J Ackerman

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e66889