JMIR Research Protocols
Protocols, grant proposals, registered reports (RR1)
Editor-in-Chief:
Amy Schwartz, MSc, Ph.D., Scientific Editor at JMIR Publications, Ontario, Canada
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Recent Articles

Despite the existence of several regional registries in the United Kingdom, gaps in geographic coverage have limited the ability to produce accurate national estimates of incidence, prevalence, and regional variation for motor neuron disease (MND). To address these challenges, a comprehensive national register encompassing England, Wales, and Northern Ireland was established to support epidemiological studies, health care planning, and clinical research.

Approximately 80% of individuals with Parkinson disease (PD) experience impaired balance and mobility, contributing to freezing of gait, an increased risk of falls, and reduced health-related quality of life. Mind-body interventions, such as mindfulness and yoga, may address both motor and nonmotor symptoms by enhancing mind-body coordination and reducing stress, thereby offering a scalable approach to balance rehabilitation in PD.


Burnout and poor well-being are serious problems in the workforce all over the world. Especially in academia, high pressure is evident. Therefore, addressing burnout is essential for enhancing academic staff well-being. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), which aims to enhance psychological flexibility skills comprising present moment awareness, value-based actions, and differentiation of thoughts from self, has been found to be a promising approach to enhance workers well-being and work satisfaction.

Chronic pain affects approximately 1 in 5 adults worldwide and imposes a major personal and societal burden. Supported self-management, increasingly delivered through digital health systems, is recommended to improve quality of life and function. Dual-facing digital health systems (DDHSs), which engage both patients and professionals, show promise but remain underexplored, with limited use of established frameworks to guide their design and evaluation.

Clinical skills deficits are a patient-safety concern, yet remediation remains underexamined, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, where faculty shortages, uneven access to simulation and supervised practice, inconsistent assessment, and stigma can hinder timely and effective support. The effects of trainee underperformance extend beyond the individual, with implications for patient care, supervisory workload, and team functioning. Although interest in remediation is increasing, the evidence base remains fragmented, dominated by high-income settings, and largely descriptive. A theory-driven review is therefore needed to explain how remediation works, for whom, and under what conditions.

Influenza, a highly contagious acute respiratory illness, causes annual seasonal epidemics worldwide, imposing a substantial public health burden. Although neuraminidase inhibitors, such as oseltamivir, can shorten symptom duration, their use is limited by antiviral resistance and adverse reactions. Kanggan mixture (KGM), an in-hospital traditional Chinese medicine preparation at Jiangsu Province Hospital of Chinese Medicine, has been widely used in clinical practice for influenza treatment, showing favorable effects on fever reduction and symptom improvement; however, high-quality comparative evidence on the efficacy and safety of KGM remains limited. This study is designed to address this gap by evaluating whether KGM is noninferior to oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza.


Intensive care units (ICUs) present a highly stressful environment for patients, relatives, and health care professionals, often resulting in psychological distress. Despite the well-documented psychosocial burden, there is a lack of low-threshold, integrated support structures for all target groups. Based on the findings of phase A, a complex intervention was developed involving the permanent integration of study therapists into ICU teams.

Transitioning to residential centers often induces significant psychological stress in older adults, adversely affecting their psychological well-being (PWB) and ability to age healthily. Chinese art activities and their combination with peer group participation have demonstrated efficacy in improving emotional well-being and fostering social connectivity among younger populations but have not been examined in older adult populations to date.

The rising burden of alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) calls for effective interventions. Alcohol cessation remains the only intervention known to reduce long-term ALD morbidity and mortality. Integrating treatment for alcohol use disorder with medical and hepatology care shows significant promise.

Physical activity (PA) is safe and beneficial for children and adolescents diagnosed with cancer, yet most engage in low levels of PA. We developed IMPACT (IMplementation of Physical Activity for Children and adolescents on Treatment), a PA intervention delivered by videoconference to enhance PA among young people during treatment for cancer and blood disorder diagnoses. IMPACT is being evaluated in a type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial in Alberta, Canada. While referral rates are high and early visual analyses suggest IMPACT may enhance PA and aspects of quality of life and physical function, participation, retention, and adherence rates are low. Findings signal the positive effect of IMPACT for those who participate and underscore the necessity of implementation adaptations. On the basis of these early findings, a demonstrated desire, and funding for PA at sites across Canada, we must first reimagine IMPACT through active collaboration with research users–those who will refer to and/or use or benefit from the intervention.
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