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Impact of a 3-Month Recall Using High-Fidelity Simulation or Screen-Based Simulation on Learning Retention During Neonatal Resuscitation Training for Residents in Anesthesia and Intensive Care: Randomized Controlled Trial

Impact of a 3-Month Recall Using High-Fidelity Simulation or Screen-Based Simulation on Learning Retention During Neonatal Resuscitation Training for Residents in Anesthesia and Intensive Care: Randomized Controlled Trial

ANTS is a validated tool used to assess nontechnical skills in various simulation situations, ranging from emergency training for medical students [18] to neonatal resuscitation for midwives using a specific modified ANTS version [19]. The ANTS scores were recorded as the overall category scores on a scale of 1‐4 (poor performance: 1 to good performance: 4). The global score (out of 16 points) is presented as a 20-point scale in the Results section, as described by the authors of the ANTS.

Anne-Claire Louvel, Cécile Dopff, Gauthier Loron, Daphne Michelet

JMIR Serious Games 2025;13:e57057

Applications of Augmented Reality for Prehospital Emergency Care: Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials

Applications of Augmented Reality for Prehospital Emergency Care: Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials

The prehospital setting represents a critical area of emergency medical care. Emergency medical services (EMSs) providers, such as emergency medical technicians, firefighters, and paramedics care for diverse patient populations in variable in highly acute settings; they are often the first to respond to life-threatening scenarios such as traumatic injury or cardiac arrest.

Rayan E Harari, Sara L Schulwolf, Paulo Borges, Hamid Salmani, Farhang Hosseini, Shannon K T Bailey, Brian Quach, Eric Nohelty, Sandra Park, Yash Verma, Eric Goralnick, Scott A Goldberg, Hamid Shokoohi, Roger D Dias, Andrew Eyre

JMIR XR Spatial Comput 2025;2:e66222

Interventions to Maintain HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Service Delivery During Public Health Emergencies in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Protocol for a Systematic Review

Interventions to Maintain HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Service Delivery During Public Health Emergencies in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Protocol for a Systematic Review

The 2009 H1 N1 pandemic increased the risk of adverse neonatal outcomes among pregnant women [11] and increased emergency department visits [12]. The COVID-19 pandemic also reduced overall health care use across 20 countries by about a third [13].

Steven Ndugwa Kabwama, Rhoda K. Wanyenze, Helena Lindgren, Neda Razaz, John M Ssenkusu, Tobias Alfvén

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e64316

Resilience Training Web App for National Health Service Keyworkers: Pilot Usability Study

Resilience Training Web App for National Health Service Keyworkers: Pilot Usability Study

There was not an enforced inclusion criterion, but this study requested for participants who were a nurse or health care professional and worked in either the emergency department, intensive care unit, or critical care. This study was run as a formative usability study by MD-TEC with human participants.

Joanna Burrell, Felicity Baker, Matthew Russell Bennion

JMIR Med Educ 2025;11:e51101

The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study

The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study

Chest pain is among the most common emergency department (ED) presentations in New South Wales [10], and acute coronary syndrome is an important differential diagnosis, with high morbidity and mortality. Several evidence-based guidelines for the assessment of chest pain have been introduced to facilitate timely diagnosis and treatment while standardizing practice across various health care facilities [11].

Madhu Prita Prakash, Aravinda Thiagalingam

JMIR Cardio 2024;9:e55958

Information Mode–Dependent Success Rates of Obtaining German Medical Informatics Initiative–Compliant Broad Consent in the Emergency Department: Single-Center Prospective Observational Study

Information Mode–Dependent Success Rates of Obtaining German Medical Informatics Initiative–Compliant Broad Consent in the Emergency Department: Single-Center Prospective Observational Study

Until now, data on the success rate and the perception of BC by patients in real-world care environments like emergency departments (EDs) are scarce [17-20]. Furthermore, it is unknown how potential selection bias is introduced when recruiting patients in the ED to consent to the BC. This is plausible as patients seeking emergency care face different challenges when being approached for research purposes than patients in elective care settings.

Felix Patricius Hans, Jan Kleinekort, Melanie Boerries, Alexandra Nieters, Gerhard Kindle, Micha Rautenberg, Laura Bühler, Gerda Weiser, Michael Clemens Röttger, Carolin Neufischer, Matthias Kühn, Julius Wehrle, Anna Slagman, Antje Fischer-Rosinsky, Larissa Eienbröker, Frank Hanses, Gisbert Wilhelm Teepe, Hans-Jörg Busch, Leo Benning

JMIR Med Inform 2024;12:e65646

Factors Impacting the Adoption and Potential Reimbursement of a Virtual Reality Tool for Pain Management in Switzerland: Qualitative Case Study

Factors Impacting the Adoption and Potential Reimbursement of a Virtual Reality Tool for Pain Management in Switzerland: Qualitative Case Study

Pain management in emergency departments (EDs) has been shown to be a challenge, with oligoanalgesia, the undertreatment of pain, being a major issue [1], leading to inadequate treatment of pain [2].

Josefine Lurtz, Thomas C Sauter, Christine Jacob

JMIR Hum Factors 2024;11:e59073

Mobile Phone Syndromic Surveillance for Respiratory Conditions in an Emergency (COVID-19) Context in Colombia: Representative Survey Design

Mobile Phone Syndromic Surveillance for Respiratory Conditions in an Emergency (COVID-19) Context in Colombia: Representative Survey Design

Finally, mobile phone syndromic surveillance is easy to deploy in emergency contexts where social distancing is required. Mobile phone–based syndromic surveillance systems used during the COVID-19 pandemic have been mainly passive and limited to mobile phone apps that require smartphone technology linked to contact-tracing apps [1,4,10,12-14], which could be limited in LMIC where the number of smartphones with internet access is limited [10].

Andres I Vecino-Ortiz, Deivis Nicolas Guzman-Tordecilla, Vidhi Maniar, Sandra Agudelo-Londoño, Oscar Franco-Suarez, Nathaly Aya Pastrana, Mariana Rodríguez-Patarroyo, Marino Mejía-Rocha, Jaime Cardona, Mariangela Chavez Chamorro, Dustin Gibson

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e50184

Accuracy of a Commercial Large Language Model (ChatGPT) to Perform Disaster Triage of Simulated Patients Using the Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (START) Protocol: Gage Repeatability and Reproducibility Study

Accuracy of a Commercial Large Language Model (ChatGPT) to Perform Disaster Triage of Simulated Patients Using the Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (START) Protocol: Gage Repeatability and Reproducibility Study

As these prompts were simply a convenience sample from emergency physicians, the study lacks the robustness to make statistically valid conclusions about the influence of the prompts. As the primary objective of this study was to assess the performance of the “out of the box” Chat GPT 4, defaults for parameters, such as Temperature and Top_P, were used. It is possible that manipulation of these parameters could improve performance.

Jeffrey Micheal Franc, Attila Julius Hertelendy, Lenard Cheng, Ryan Hata, Manuela Verde

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e55648