JMIR Formative Research
Process evaluations, early results, and feasibility/pilot studies of digital and non-digital interventions
Editor-in-Chief:
Amaryllis Mavragani, PhD, Scientific Editor at JMIR Publications, Canada
Impact Factor 2.4 More information about Impact Factor CiteScore 4.2 More information about CiteScore
Recent Articles

Pneumonia remains the leading cause of mortality in individuals aged 5 years or younger globally, with India bearing a disproportionately high burden. The introduction of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) in India necessitated innovative approaches to support frontline health workers (FLHWs), particularly in remote settings. To address this, a customizable WhatsApp-based PCV chatbot was developed as a complementary tool to traditional training and reference materials.


Recovery support services (RSS) are an evidence-based approach to support recovery from substance use disorders, most often composed of peer-to-peer support, referrals to housing, job training, and other forms of prosocial engagement and activities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, RSS providers quickly converted in-person services to digital delivery to avoid disruption. It is unclear if this rapid conversion impacted the delivery of services or if this delivery model could enhance RSS reach and uptake more generally by extending the reach of RSS providers and offering an alternative delivery method and access point.

Cancer survivors often experience complex and coexisting emotions throughout diagnosis, treatment, and posttreatment life. Emotion classification of patient narratives may help in understanding survivorship experiences; however, evidence remains limited for multidimensional classification using cancer survivor interview narratives.

The rapid growth of digital technologies has transformed daily activities, health management, and social interaction. Older adults, however, continue to face challenges in adopting and using these tools due to limited previous exposure, age-related sensory or cognitive decline, and low digital confidence. In Brazil, internet access among adults aged 60 years or older has increased, yet digital exclusion persists, worsening health disparities. Mobile health (mHealth) apps offer a potential strategy to promote digital inclusion, strengthen digital competencies, and support healthy aging. Nonetheless, studies show that culturally adapted, multidisciplinary interventions for this group remain scarce and are rarely assessed through both quantitative and qualitative methods.


Event-based digital health data and information exchange are a complex sociotechnical challenge because they rely on the existence of stable, shared meanings for care process concepts such as mandate, responsibility, episode boundaries, and referral, across clinical, administrative, financing, and technical stakeholders. International Organization for Standardization 13940:2015 System of Concepts to Support Continuity of Care (ContSys) provides a conceptual framework for continuity-of-care processes, but national translations and contextualization, along with their governance implications, remain largely undocumented in the scholarly literature.

Parkinson disease (PD) is a pervasive neurodegenerative disorder globally, largely characterized by motor symptoms. Most existing artificial intelligence models for PD detection are trained on participants in well-resourced settings with confirmed clinical diagnoses. However, specialist-confirmed labels are often infeasible in low-resource settings.

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is one of the most common noncommunicable diseases, requiring ongoing lifestyle changes and continuous glucose management through medication, diet, and physical activity. Traditional self-monitoring of blood glucose can be burdensome, especially with frequent finger pricks. As continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) becomes more affordable and accessible, it offers benefits such as increased glucose awareness, behavioral modifications, and reduced anxiety. However, challenges remain, including cost, discomfort, skin reactions, and privacy concerns. In the United Kingdom, perceptions of CGM among people with T2D, including both users and nonusers, are not well understood, limiting insight into factors influencing adoption and sustained use.


The use of artificial intelligence and machine learning (ML) tools is now common in the advancement of health care services and clinical risk estimation. Legacy systems make use of highly informative feature sets developed from years of clinical expertise and research to estimate different outcomes, but only recently have they been tested against novel statistical approaches. One such system, the Johns Hopkins Adjusted Clinical Group (ACG) System, is a long-standing and widely used approach to categorizing clinical risk factors, and it is amenable to ML techniques.

Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to enhance resource efficiency, improve patient treatment, and increase safety in health care. Still, there is limited knowledge on how to implement and evaluate AI solutions in real-world clinical settings. To address this gap, we conducted a formative process evaluation of the first large-scale procurement and implementation of a commercial AI solution in Norwegian health care. F The Non-Adoption, Abandonment, Scale-up, Spread, and Sustainability (NASSS) framework, was used for the formative process evaluation throughout the 4-year project to guide data collection, analysis, and real-time feedback.
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