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Assessment of Heterosexual-Identified Men Who Have Sex With Men and Men of Diverse Sexual Identities: Protocol for an International, Multilingual, Online, Comparative Sexuality Study

Assessment of Heterosexual-Identified Men Who Have Sex With Men and Men of Diverse Sexual Identities: Protocol for an International, Multilingual, Online, Comparative Sexuality Study

Specifically, narcissistic trait attraction will be measured using an unnamed scale previously used by Haslam and Montrose [50] in a study assessing narcissistic trait attraction among a sample of young adult heterosexual females. Haslam and Montrose [50] asked participants to consider 20 statements relating to the extent that they found narcissistic personality traits attractive in a potential mate.

Andrew D Eaton, Travis R Scheadler, Megan Rowe, Salem Rao, Sandra Kwan, Oliver W J Beer, Paul A Shuper, Tyrone J Curtis, Adam Busch, Daniel Vandervoort, Lauren B McInroy

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e66897

Short- and Long-Term Effectiveness of Brief Intensive Trauma Treatment for Adolescents With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Their Caregivers: Protocol for a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

Short- and Long-Term Effectiveness of Brief Intensive Trauma Treatment for Adolescents With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Their Caregivers: Protocol for a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

This RCT follows up on a pilot study (N=22) of the same BITT program, which previously demonstrated promising results, including a reduction in PTSD symptoms up to 3 months post treatment [34]. The primary objective of this RCT is to assess the effectiveness of a BITT compared to a waitlist control group (WLCG) in reducing symptoms of PTSD among adolescents aged 12-18 years.

Myrna M Westerveld, Malindi van der Mheen, Rik Knipschild, Kim Maijer, Marieke E de Keizer-Altink, Nina Albisser, Marielle J E Hoekstra, Anne Timmermans-Jansen, Rosa Zijp, Anne A Krabbendam, Francisca J A (Bonny) van Steensel, Kees-Jan Kan, Chaim Huyser, Wouter G Staal, Elisabeth M W J Utens, Ramón J L Lindauer

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e66115

Improving Diet Quality of People Living With Obesity by Building Effective Dietetic Service Delivery Using Technology in a Primary Health Care Setting: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Improving Diet Quality of People Living With Obesity by Building Effective Dietetic Service Delivery Using Technology in a Primary Health Care Setting: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

The objective is to compare the effectiveness of a 1-year digital dietary intervention on body weight reduction and improved diet quality, in adults living with obesity delivered by dietitians in a primary care setting, with a control group. The chat2 (Connecting Health and Technology 2) study is a 1-year randomized controlled trial (RCT). Consenting participants will be randomly assigned (1:1) to an intervention or minimal intervention control group.

Deborah A Kerr, Clare E Collins, Andrea Begley, Barbara Mullan, Satvinder S Dhaliwal, Claire E Pulker, Fengqing Zhu, Marie Fialkowski, Richard L Prince, Richard Norman, Anthony P James, Paul Aveyard, Helen Mitchell, Jacquie Garton-Smith, Megan E Rollo, Chloe Maxwell-Smith, Amira Hassan, Hayley Breare, Lucy M Butcher, Christina M Pollard

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e64735

Exposure to and Engagement With Digital Psychoeducational Content and Community Related to Maternal Mental Health by Perinatal Persons and Mothers: Protocol for a Web-Based Survey With Optional Follow-Up

Exposure to and Engagement With Digital Psychoeducational Content and Community Related to Maternal Mental Health by Perinatal Persons and Mothers: Protocol for a Web-Based Survey With Optional Follow-Up

Individuals whose responses to the eligibility screener suggested that they were a bot or fraudulent were not invited to complete the survey. Eligible individuals were emailed personal invitations to complete a web-based survey via Qualtrics. Individuals who did not respond to the invitation were sent a reminder 1 day later. Nonresponders were sent 2 additional invitations a few weeks later. Participants who partially completed the survey were sent a reminder email with a new survey link.

Molly E Waring, Katherine E McManus-Shipp, Christiana M Field, Sandesh Bhusal, Asley Perez, Olivia Shapiro, Sophia A Gaspard, Cindy-Lee Dennis

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e64075

The Motivations of Citizens to Attend an eHealth Course in the Public Library: Qualitative Interview Study

The Motivations of Citizens to Attend an eHealth Course in the Public Library: Qualitative Interview Study

I think it’s a shame that there’s no choice anymore. There’s obviously a generation of us that needs to have a transition that’s a little bit smooth, and not like: bam, next year everything’s just different. I think a lot of people my age have problems with that. For most, this digital experience was work-related where they were trained in specific, mostly simple computer programs useful for their jobs.

Lucille Standaar, Adriana Margje Israel, Rosalie van der Vaart, Brigitta Keij, Frank J van Lenthe, Roland Friele, Mariëlle A Beenackers, Lilian Huibertina Davida van Tuyl

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60612

Applying Patient and Health Professional Preferences in Co-Designing a Digital Brief Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Prescription Opioid–Related Harm Among Patients With Chronic Noncancer Pain: Qualitative Analysis

Applying Patient and Health Professional Preferences in Co-Designing a Digital Brief Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Prescription Opioid–Related Harm Among Patients With Chronic Noncancer Pain: Qualitative Analysis

Patient characteristics (n=18; 55% women; mean age 49.5, SD 6.91 y) are presented in a previous study [8]. We provide an overview in Table 1; for a detailed summary of each individual, please refer to a previous report [8]. In the sample of patients interviewed, half (9/18, 50%) met the threshold for current unsafe opioid misuse on a validated psychometric scale (COMM [35]).

Rachel A Elphinston, Sue Pager, Farhad Fatehi, Michele Sterling, Kelly Brown, Paul Gray, Linda Hipper, Lauren Cahill, Maisa Ziadni, Peter Worthy, Jason P Connor

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e57212

Impact of Computer-Mediated Versus Face-to-Face Motivational-Type Interviews on Participants’ Language and Subsequent Cannabis Use: Randomized Controlled Trial

Impact of Computer-Mediated Versus Face-to-Face Motivational-Type Interviews on Participants’ Language and Subsequent Cannabis Use: Randomized Controlled Trial

“Sustain talk” is also categorized into six types of statements reflecting a client’s desire, ability, reasons, need, readiness, and commitment to maintaining the target behavior. Each distinct statement within a motivational interview (also referred to as a “language unit”) is also coded for its “strength” (valence) using scale values ranging from +5 to –5. Positive values reflect the degree to which a statement supports reducing or abstaining from a target behavior (eg, drug use).

Karla D Llanes, Jon Amastae, Paul C Amrhein, Nadra Lisha, Katherina Arteaga, Eugene Lopez, Roberto A Moran, Lawrence D Cohn

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e59085

Cardiac Self-Efficacy Improvement in a Digital Heart Health Program: Secondary Analysis From a Feasibility and Acceptability Pilot Study

Cardiac Self-Efficacy Improvement in a Digital Heart Health Program: Secondary Analysis From a Feasibility and Acceptability Pilot Study

As maintaining a healthy lifestyle is difficult for many adults [5], 1 method of CVD prevention and management is participation in behavioral interventions focused on healthy lifestyle modifications [4]. Position statements from the US Preventive Services Task Force state that lifestyle modification programs that emphasize a healthy diet and physical activity have a wide variety of cardiovascular health benefits and CVD risk reduction among individuals with and without a diagnosis of CVD [6-8].

Kimberly G Lockwood, Priya R Kulkarni, OraLee H Branch, Sarah A Graham

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60676

Implementation of the Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes Model for Hypertension Education of Frontline Health Care Workers in the Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria: Explanatory Sequential Mixed Methods Evaluation

Implementation of the Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes Model for Hypertension Education of Frontline Health Care Workers in the Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria: Explanatory Sequential Mixed Methods Evaluation

Every ECHO session comprised a presession knowledge quiz, introduction, didactic presentation by domain experts, a case presentation by health care workers at an HTN Program site, a postsession knowledge quiz, and a reaction survey. The m Doc Healthcare team worked with a selected HTN Program Site before each session to select and present a case for each ECHO session. Prospective participants registered in advance for each session using an web-based form that included demographic characteristics.

Abigail S Baldridge, Adaora Odukwe, Olabisi Dabiri, L Nneka Mobisson, Maria Moosa Munnee, Ayoposi Ogboye, Dorothy Naa Korkoi Aryee, Rodrick Mwale, Jonas Akpakli, Ikechukwu A Orji, Rosemary C B Okoli, Nanna R Ripiye, Dike B Ojji, Mark D Huffman, Namratha R Kandula, Lisa R Hirschhorn

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e66351

Mobile Health App for Adolescent Asthma Self-Management: Development and Usability Study of the Pulmonary Education and Knowledge Mobile Asthma Action Plan

Mobile Health App for Adolescent Asthma Self-Management: Development and Usability Study of the Pulmonary Education and Knowledge Mobile Asthma Action Plan

A cosmetic issue refers to a superficial concern that does not affect users’ ability to complete a task, such as formatting inconsistencies or color preferences; these issues are typically of lower priority for resolution. A minor issue represents a problem with an available workaround, such as restricting numerical input to whole numbers rather than allowing decimals. Major issues, however, can significantly impact data quality, user satisfaction, or system functionality.

Xing He, Jiang Bian, Ariel Berlinski, Yi Guo, A Larry Simmons, S Alexandra Marshall, Carolyn J Greene, Rita Hudson Brown, Jessica Turner, Tamara T Perry

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e64212