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Gender-Inclusive Language in Public-Facing Labor and Delivery Web Pages in the New York Tristate Area: Cross-Sectional Study

Gender-Inclusive Language in Public-Facing Labor and Delivery Web Pages in the New York Tristate Area: Cross-Sectional Study

For example, Parker et al [6] discuss the experiences of a transmasculine patient who was delayed in seeing the doctor because the receptionist argued that he was not the intended person. These patterns are not limited to individual heterosexist health care workers but also integrated into hospital software.

Sarah Mohsen Isaac, Mark Dawes, Emily Ruth Howell, Antonia Francis Oladipo

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e53057

MyPEEPS Mobile App for HIV Prevention Among Transmasculine Youth: Adaptation Through Community-Based Feedback and Usability Evaluation

MyPEEPS Mobile App for HIV Prevention Among Transmasculine Youth: Adaptation Through Community-Based Feedback and Usability Evaluation

This paper outlines key user-centered design methods to adapt and improve the interface and usability of the My PEEPS Mobile app for young transgender men and transmasculine youth. The My PEEPS Mobile app for young transgender men and transmasculine youth was adapted through a user-centered design approach for mobile health (m Health) apps [7,11,12], which included an iterative review of the adapted prototype by expert advisors and a youth advisory board (YAB) from June to November 2022.

Dorcas Adedoja, Lisa M Kuhns, Asa Radix, Robert Garofalo, Maeve Brin, Rebecca Schnall

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e56561

Preferences for and Experiences of an HIV-Prevention Mobile App Designed for Transmasculine People: Pilot Feasibility Trial and Qualitative Investigation

Preferences for and Experiences of an HIV-Prevention Mobile App Designed for Transmasculine People: Pilot Feasibility Trial and Qualitative Investigation

Transmasculine people, who are the focus of this study, are people who were assigned female sex at birth but whose current gender identity is masculine; thus, transmasculine is a broader group that is inclusive of transgender men. Meta-analyses have estimated the prevalence of HIV among transgender men and transmasculine people to be 3.2% [4] in the United States and 2.6% [5] worldwide, respectively.

Jeb Jones, Gareth Butler, Meaghan Woody, Amanda D Castel, Paige Kulie, Martha Sheets, Ayden I Scheim, Sari L Reisner, Rachel Valencia, Minglun Wang, Joanne D Stekler, Patrick S Sullivan, Rob Stephenson

JMIR Form Res 2023;7:e51055