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Experiences Receiving and Delivering Virtual Health Care For Women: Qualitative Evidence Synthesis

Experiences Receiving and Delivering Virtual Health Care For Women: Qualitative Evidence Synthesis

Each article was assigned a richness score by 2 team members (AS and TL-D), ranging from 1 to 5, based on the volume and depth of relevant qualitative data [28]. We sampled a subset of articles for abstraction with a focus on overrepresenting marginalized voices, purposively choosing articles from each health care delivery pathway, and prioritizing articles with higher richness scores.

Karen M Goldstein, Sharron Rushton, Allison A Lewinski, Abigail Shapiro, Tiera Lanford-Davey, Jessica N Coleman, Neetu Chawla, Dhara B Patel, Katherine Van Loon, Megan Shepherd-Banigan, Catherine Sims, Sarah Cantrell, Susan Alton Dailey, Jennifer M Gierisch

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e68314

Strategies to Bridge Equitable Implementation of Telehealth

Strategies to Bridge Equitable Implementation of Telehealth

Rapid implementation often occurred with limited prior knowledge about telehealth and based on a selective sample of providers who were willing to offer it, often for only select problems that would be reimbursed, and with a selected sample of individuals who opted into using telehealth. As a result, significant gaps in equitable implementation exist given the rapid nature of the roll-out, which likely reinforces health disparities in health care access for already marginalized patient populations [3,4].

Allison M Gustavson, Allison A Lewinski, Ellen E Fitzsimmons-Craft, Gloria D Coronado, Sarah E Linke, Denalee M O'Malley, Alyce S Adams, Russell E Glasgow, Lisa M Klesges

Interact J Med Res 2023;12:e40358

A Tailored SMS Text Message–Based Intervention to Facilitate Patient Access to Referred Community-Based Social Needs Resources: Protocol for a Pilot Feasibility and Acceptability Study

A Tailored SMS Text Message–Based Intervention to Facilitate Patient Access to Referred Community-Based Social Needs Resources: Protocol for a Pilot Feasibility and Acceptability Study

Our objective is to provide a detailed illustration of how SMS technology can complement an existing social needs screening, referral, and navigation program at a federally qualified health center (FQHC) without disrupting usual clinical care. This protocol makes a novel contribution by presenting one approach to using automated messages that can readily scale to other clinical settings.

Tyler Lian, Hadley Reid, Abigail Rader, Sarah Dewitt-Feldman, Elmira Hezarkhani, Elizabeth Gu, Malik Scott, Kate Kutzer, Sahil Sandhu, Carolyn Crowder, Kristin Ito, Howard Eisenson, Janet Prvu Bettger, Ryan J Shaw, Allison A Lewinski, David Y Ming, Hayden B Bosworth, Leah L Zullig, Bryan C Batch, Connor Drake

JMIR Res Protoc 2022;11(10):e37316

Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review

Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review

A first step to address the question of equivalence of synchronous (real time) telehealth via phone or video as a replacement for in-person care for chronic diseases is a review focused specifically on evidence from the comparative literature. If there is moderate to strong evidence that telehealth is equivalent to in-person care for patients with chronic conditions, its promise should be developed more fully and incorporated as a standard option for delivering longitudinal care.

Allison A Lewinski, Conor Walsh, Sharron Rushton, Diana Soliman, Scott M Carlson, Matthew W Luedke, David J Halpern, Matthew J Crowley, Ryan J Shaw, Jason A Sharpe, Anastasia-Stefania Alexopoulos, Amir Alishahi Tabriz, Jessica R Dietch, Diya M Uthappa, Soohyun Hwang, Katharine A Ball Ricks, Sarah Cantrell, Andrzej S Kosinski, Belinda Ear, Adelaide M Gordon, Jennifer M Gierisch, John W Williams Jr, Karen M Goldstein

J Med Internet Res 2022;24(8):e37100

Exchanges in a Virtual Environment for Diabetes Self-Management Education and Support: Social Network Analysis

Exchanges in a Virtual Environment for Diabetes Self-Management Education and Support: Social Network Analysis

The following network measures were used: average degree (average number of connections of all nodes; a higher average degree number means that members of a network interacted with a higher number of members via synchronous conversations, either on a one-to-one basis or at a group level); graph density (proportion of connections relative to the total number of possible connections; ranging from 0 to 1; a higher graph density means that members of a network most likely engaged in conversations involving a higher

Carlos A Arturo Pérez-Aldana, Allison A Lewinski, Constance M Johnson, Allison A Vorderstrasse, Sahiti Myneni

JMIR Diabetes 2021;6(1):e21611

Digital Phenotyping Self-Monitoring Behaviors for Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: Observational Study Using Latent Class Growth Analysis

Digital Phenotyping Self-Monitoring Behaviors for Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: Observational Study Using Latent Class Growth Analysis

This included weight (pounds) measured by a cellular-enabled scale provided by Body Trace (Palo Alto, CA, USA), blood glucose (mg/d L) measured through a phone-tethered glucometer provided by i Health (Mountain View, CA, USA), and physical activity measured in daily steps by a wrist-worn accelerometer and associated fitness app provided by Fitbit (San Francisco, CA, USA).

Qing Yang, Daniel Hatch, Matthew J Crowley, Allison A Lewinski, Jacqueline Vaughn, Dori Steinberg, Allison Vorderstrasse, Meilin Jiang, Ryan J Shaw

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2020;8(6):e17730

Addressing Diabetes and Poorly Controlled Hypertension: Pragmatic mHealth Self-Management Intervention

Addressing Diabetes and Poorly Controlled Hypertension: Pragmatic mHealth Self-Management Intervention

This was a single-arm, pragmatic study designed to implement a 6-month intervention. This multifactorial intervention simultaneously addressed multiple risk factors for adverse renal outcomes through a combination of patient self-monitoring, behavioral therapies, and education that optimized adherence and improvements in health behavior self-efficacy. As a proxy for improvements in these process measures, we examined whether the intervention was associated with a positive impact on systolic blood pressure.

Allison A. Lewinski, Uptal D. Patel, Clarissa J. Diamantidis, Megan Oakes, Khaula Baloch, Matthew J. Crowley, Jonathan Wilson, Jane Pendergast, Holly Biola, L. Ebony Boulware, Hayden B. Bosworth

J Med Internet Res 2019;21(4):e12541

Type 2 Diabetes Education and Support in a Virtual Environment: A Secondary Analysis of Synchronously Exchanged Social Interaction and Support

Type 2 Diabetes Education and Support in a Virtual Environment: A Secondary Analysis of Synchronously Exchanged Social Interaction and Support

This figure was originally published in Lewinski AA et al [26]. Synchronous support session in the restaurant in the virtual environment. The avatars of the individuals living with type 2 diabetes and the diabetes educator are sitting at the restaurant table and discussing healthy food options. Synchronous education session in the community center in the virtual environment.

Allison A Lewinski, Ruth A Anderson, Allison A Vorderstrasse, Edwin B Fisher, Wei Pan, Constance M Johnson

J Med Internet Res 2018;20(2):e61

Analyzing Unstructured Communication in a Computer-Mediated Environment for Adults With Type 2 Diabetes: A Research Protocol

Analyzing Unstructured Communication in a Computer-Mediated Environment for Adults With Type 2 Diabetes: A Research Protocol

While virtual environments can have many different types of representations (eg, small towns, space crafts) and facilitate a variety of interactions, the proposed study describes a virtual environment as one that recreates a small town using three-dimensional graphics [61]. The replication of real-life environments can foster skills that promote real-world application of essential self-management behaviors [16].

Allison A Lewinski, Ruth A Anderson, Allison A Vorderstrasse, Edwin B Fisher, Wei Pan, Constance M Johnson

JMIR Res Protoc 2017;6(4):e65