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Measurement of Daily Actions Associated With Mental Health Using the Things You Do Questionnaire–15-Item: Questionnaire Development and Validation Study

Measurement of Daily Actions Associated With Mental Health Using the Things You Do Questionnaire–15-Item: Questionnaire Development and Validation Study

Using survey development methodology [16], 5 different categories of daily actions (ie, factors) were found to have the strongest associations with mental health: healthy thinking (eg, treating oneself with respect), meaningful activities (eg, doing something enjoyable), goals and plans (eg, making plans and following through on them), healthy habits (eg, a consistent sleep-wake routine), and social connections (eg, having meaningful conversations).

Madelyne A Bisby, Michael P Jones, Lauren Staples, Blake Dear, Nickolai Titov

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e57804

Patients’ Perspectives on Plans Generated During Primary Care Visits and Self-Reported Adherence at 3 Months: Data From a Randomized Trial

Patients’ Perspectives on Plans Generated During Primary Care Visits and Self-Reported Adherence at 3 Months: Data From a Randomized Trial

To our knowledge, there have been no large, multisite studies in the United States describing patients’ perceptions of the plans that result from their primary care visits, the extent to which patients follow these plans, and their reasons for following or not. The purpose of this study was to describe patients’ perceptions of the plans generated during primary care visits and characterize these plans.

Cheryl D Stults, Kathleen M Mazor, Michael Cheung, Bernice Ruo, Martina Li, Amanda Walker, Cassandra Saphirak, Florin Vaida, Sonal Singh, Kimberly A Fisher, Rebecca Rosen, Robert Yood, Lawrence Garber, Christopher Longhurst, Gene Kallenberg, Edward Yu, Albert Chan, Marlene Millen, Ming Tai-Seale

J Particip Med 2024;16:e50242