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Co-Designing a Web-Based and Tablet App to Evaluate Clinical Outcomes of Early Psychosis Service Users in a Learning Health Care Network: User-Centered Design Workshop and Pilot Study

Co-Designing a Web-Based and Tablet App to Evaluate Clinical Outcomes of Early Psychosis Service Users in a Learning Health Care Network: User-Centered Design Workshop and Pilot Study

In response to this environment, we found it necessary to ask sites to focus on small implementation steps even though we trained them on all available workflows. For example, we asked pilot sites to initially focus on engaging service users and their support persons to complete enrollment and complete surveys. When that was mastered, we asked them to focus on engaging new service users and support persons with Beehive during their clinical intake process.

Kathleen E Burch, Valerie L Tryon, Katherine M Pierce, Laura M Tully, Sabrina Ereshefsky, Mark Savill, Leigh Smith, Adam B Wilcox, Christopher Komei Hakusui, Viviana E Padilla, Amanda P McNamara, Merissa Kado-Walton, Andrew J Padovani, Chelyah Miller, Madison J Miles, Nitasha Sharma, Khanh Linh H Nguyen, Yi Zhang, Tara A Niendam

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e65889

Developing and Assessing a Scalable Digital Health Tool for Pretest Genetic Education in Patients With Early-Onset Colorectal Cancer: Mixed Methods Design

Developing and Assessing a Scalable Digital Health Tool for Pretest Genetic Education in Patients With Early-Onset Colorectal Cancer: Mixed Methods Design

However, due to the small sample size, quantitative data were limited to descriptive purposes and were used primarily to describe the study sample and support the qualitative findings by incorporating patients’ immediate feedback on the educational content. While we intentionally recruited Black and Spanish-speaking patients to ensure diverse representation, the findings should not be generalized to all patients with early-onset CRC.

Jessica N Rivera Rivera, Moran Snir, Emilie Simmons, Tara Schmidlen, Misha Sholeh, Melinda Leigh Maconi, Carley Geiss, Hayden Fulton, Laura Barton, Brian D Gonzalez, Jennifer Permuth, Susan Vadaparampil

JMIR Cancer 2025;11:e59464

Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Advanced Technology Clinical Simulation Manikins in Improving the Capability of Australian Paramedics to Deliver High-Quality Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Pre- and Postintervention Study

Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Advanced Technology Clinical Simulation Manikins in Improving the Capability of Australian Paramedics to Deliver High-Quality Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Pre- and Postintervention Study

Of those studies that have included subsamples of paramedics, the number of paramedics constituted a small proportion of the total sample, and the results did not examine intervention effects by professional subgroups [14,15]. Consequently, results from this study can help to determine the role of advanced technology simulation manikins in cardiopulmonary resuscitation training and may be useful to optimize instructional design.

Alison Zucca, Jamie Bryant, Jeffrey Purse, Stuart Szwec, Robert Sanson-Fisher, Lucy Leigh, Mike Richer, Alan Morrison

JMIR Cardio 2024;8:e49895

Using the Kirkpatrick Model to Evaluate the Effect of a Primary Trauma Care Course on Health Care Workers’ Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice in Two Vietnamese Local Hospitals: Prospective Intervention Study

Using the Kirkpatrick Model to Evaluate the Effect of a Primary Trauma Care Course on Health Care Workers’ Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice in Two Vietnamese Local Hospitals: Prospective Intervention Study

The participants at the 2 hospitals were divided into small groups of 6‐7 people. Each group included both doctors and nurses to replicate an emergency team on duty in the ED. The assessments were conducted using an Objective Structured Clinical Examination format [20,24] with 4 stations, each station lasting up to 10 minutes, with one observer who used a standardized checklist to rate the performance of the team. Each scenario checklist comprised 10 key actions.

Ba Tuan Nguyen, Van Anh Nguyen, Christopher Leigh Blizzard, Andrew Palmer, Huu Tu Nguyen, Thang Cong Quyet, Viet Tran, Marcus Skinner, Haydn Perndt, Mark R Nelson

JMIR Med Educ 2024;10:e47127

Assessing Outcomes in HIV Prevention and Treatment Programs With Female Sex Workers and Men Who Have Sex With Men: Expanded Polling Booth Survey Protocol

Assessing Outcomes in HIV Prevention and Treatment Programs With Female Sex Workers and Men Who Have Sex With Men: Expanded Polling Booth Survey Protocol

Potential participants are selected using a 2-stage, randomized, probability-based sampling procedure and organized into small homogenous groups by key population groups (ie, female sex workers and men who have sex with men) and typology of the location at which sex work and cruising take place (eg, bar, bar with lodges, street, and clubs). Each PBS session consists of 10 to 12 participants of the same key population group who congregate and solicit clients or cruise in the same locations.

Parinita Bhattacharjee, Leigh M McClarty, Joshua Kimani, Shajy Isac, Rhoda Wanjiru Kabuti, Antony Kinyua, Jaffred Karakaja Okoyana, Virjinia Njeri Ndukuyu, Helgar Musyoki, Anthony Kiplagat, Peter Arimi, Souradet Shaw, Faran Emmanuel, Monica Gandhi, Marissa Becker, James Blanchard

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e54313