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Applying the Nonadoption, Abandonment, Scale-Up, Spread, and Sustainability (NASSS) Framework to Adapt the CHAMP App for Pediatric Feeding Tube Weaning: Application and Case Report

Applying the Nonadoption, Abandonment, Scale-Up, Spread, and Sustainability (NASSS) Framework to Adapt the CHAMP App for Pediatric Feeding Tube Weaning: Application and Case Report

The CHAMP App was developed for data transfer with a pediatric cardiac population and provides families and the clinical team with a new model of care leveraged by a mobile app integrated with a software platform [17]. Data options include feeding intake, output, vital signs, weights, videos, and concerns (Figure 1).

Dana M Bakula, Alexandra Zax, Sarah Edwards, Kristina Nash, April Escobar, Rachel Graham, Amy Ricketts, Ryan Thompson, Sarah Bullard, Julianne Brogren, Leah Shimmens, Lori A Erickson

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e67398

Assessment of Large Language Model Performance on Medical School Essay-Style Concept Appraisal Questions: Exploratory Study

Assessment of Large Language Model Performance on Medical School Essay-Style Concept Appraisal Questions: Exploratory Study

While unaware that any responses had been AI-generated, they graded 5 deidentified student responses and 2 AI-generated responses (presented in random order) for their CAPP question, using a standard rubric (Multimedia Appendix 1). For 2 CAPPs, 4 student responses were used instead of 5 due to lack of consent for inclusion in the registry. Grading each CAPP took approximately 30 minutes; thus, a larger sample size was infeasible for this exploratory study.

Seysha Mehta, Eliot N Haddad, Indira Bhavsar Burke, Alana K Majors, Rie Maeda, Sean M Burke, Abhishek Deshpande, Amy S Nowacki, Christina C Lindenmeyer, Neil Mehta

JMIR Med Educ 2025;11:e72034

Identifying and Taking Action on the Protective and Risk Factors of Black Maternal Mental Health: Protocol for Community-Based Participatory Study

Identifying and Taking Action on the Protective and Risk Factors of Black Maternal Mental Health: Protocol for Community-Based Participatory Study

A combination of quantitative (sociodemographic survey and validated scales) and qualitative (focus group and in-depth interviews) methods and a participatory process of group concept mapping will be used to generate a new understanding of the complexities of Black MMH. Sequential mixed methods approach.

Priscilla N Boakye, Kenneth Fung, Mawuko Setordzi, Egbe B Etowa, Rosanra Yoon, Josephine Etowa, Feven Desta, Nana Ama Tiwaa-Boateng, Modupe Tunde-Byass, Janet Yamada, Karline Wilson-Mitchell, Cynthia Maxwell, Crystal T Clark, Josephine Pui-Hing Wong

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e70076

Feasibility of Data Collection Via Consumer-Grade Wearable Devices in Adolescent Student Athletes: Prospective Longitudinal Cohort Study

Feasibility of Data Collection Via Consumer-Grade Wearable Devices in Adolescent Student Athletes: Prospective Longitudinal Cohort Study

The integration of these devices with standard clinical protocols offers a promising solution to the challenges of recovery monitoring [17-20]. Consumer-grade wearable devices provide a noninvasive and user-friendly means to collect a multitude of physiological and biomechanical parameters, including heart rate, activity levels, sleep patterns, and movement patterns [18].

Danielle Ransom, Brant Tudor, Sarah Irani, Mohamed Rehman, Stacy Suskauer, P Patrick Mularoni, Luis Ahumada

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e54630

Recent Advancements in Wearable Hydration-Monitoring Technologies: Scoping Review of Sensors, Trends, and Future Directions

Recent Advancements in Wearable Hydration-Monitoring Technologies: Scoping Review of Sensors, Trends, and Future Directions

The results duplicates were removed and then exported into a Mendeley library (Elsevier). A total of 551 articles were identified initially; Pub Med returned 408 (74%) articles, IEEE Xplore returned 107 (19.4%) articles, and articles from additional sources were also included (n=37, 6.7% papers that were identified from Google Scholar search and the references of the included papers that did not appear in the initial search results).

Nazim A. Belabbaci, Raphael Anaadumba, Mohammad Arif Ul Alam

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e60569

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

The Influence of Medical Culture and Key Factors on Mobile App Usage Frequency and Perceived Effectiveness in Physical Therapy: Cross-Sectional Study

The Influence of Medical Culture and Key Factors on Mobile App Usage Frequency and Perceived Effectiveness in Physical Therapy: Cross-Sectional Study

Conversely, a rigid or traditional medical culture can act as a barrier to the usage of new technologies and methods [4]. The role of medical culture extends beyond the attitudes of individual professionals, influencing how teams function and how institutions respond to emerging challenges in health care [5].

Khalid A Alahmari, Ravi Shankar Reddy

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e68406

Comparison of Multimodal Deep Learning Approaches for Predicting Clinical Deterioration in Ward Patients: Observational Cohort Study

Comparison of Multimodal Deep Learning Approaches for Predicting Clinical Deterioration in Ward Patients: Observational Cohort Study

The first method of CUI parameterization used a Keras Text Vectorization layer to tokenize a list of CUIs into a vector of integers, where there was a unique one-to-one mapping from CUI to integer. These integers get mapped to dense vectors. In total, 31,418 unique CUIs were shared between the UC and the UW data.

Charles A Kotula, Jennie Martin, Kyle A Carey, Dana P Edelson, Dmitriy Dligach, Anoop Mayampurath, Majid Afshar, Matthew M Churpek

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e75340

Relationship of Hair Cortisol Concentration With Perceived and Somatic Stress Indices: Cross-Sectional Pilot Study

Relationship of Hair Cortisol Concentration With Perceived and Somatic Stress Indices: Cross-Sectional Pilot Study

Since cortisol is incorporated into growing hair, hair is emerging as a novel matrix for measuring retrospective cortisol secretion over months [9,11,12]. Each 1 cm hair segment, beginning from the proximal end, approximates a month’s cortisol production.

Sharon H Bergquist, Danyang Wang, Brad Pearce, Alicia K Smith, Allison Hankus, David L Roberts, Miranda A Moore

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e63811

Implications of Data Extraction and Processing of Electronic Health Records for Epidemiological Research: Observational Study

Implications of Data Extraction and Processing of Electronic Health Records for Epidemiological Research: Observational Study

Nivel-PCD: All insurance claims codes as recorded by the GP are received, however, when a dataset has been requested by the researcher, the codes are filtered by the data processor to include a selection of codes relevant to the study (in agreement with the researchers), on a database zone level. Contacts Defined as moments of contact between a GP and a patient. Based on unique dates on which an insurance claim code was recorded by the GP, that is, the maximum number of contacts per patient per day is 1.

Melissa H J van Essen, Robin Twickler, Yvette M Weesie, Ilgin G Arslan, Feikje Groenhof, Lilian L Peters, Isabelle Bos, Robert A Verheij

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e64628