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Assessing Dynamic Cognitive Function in the Daily Lives of Youths With and Without Type 1 Diabetes: Usability Study

Assessing Dynamic Cognitive Function in the Daily Lives of Youths With and Without Type 1 Diabetes: Usability Study

This study aimed to test the feasibility of using a smartphone app called the Ambulatory Research in Cognition (ARC) app in youths. The ARC app, developed at Washington University in St. Louis, was originally designed to assess cognitive function in everyday environments in adults at risk of developing dementia [19].

Mary Katherine Ray, Jorie Fleming, Andrew Aschenbrenner, Jason Hassenstab, Brooke Redwine, Carissa Burns, Ana Maria Arbelaez, Mary Ellen Vajravelu, Tamara Hershey

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60275

Patient Partnership Tools to Support Medication Safety in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: Protocol for a Nonrandomized Stepped Wedge Clinical Trial

Patient Partnership Tools to Support Medication Safety in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: Protocol for a Nonrandomized Stepped Wedge Clinical Trial

Health care encounters are opportunities for health care professionals (HCPs) to work productively with patients and families to address risks in medication use in ambulatory settings [1,2]. This study assesses a systematic redesign of time-limited primary care encounters to improve medication safety. Adverse drug events (ADEs) account for 6.1 emergency department visits per 1000 population each year in the United States and 38.6% of these visits require hospitalization [3].

Yan Xiao, Kimberley G Fulda, Richard A Young, Z Noah Hendrix, Kathryn M Daniel, Kay Yut Chen, Yuan Zhou, Jennifer L Roye, Ludmila Kosmari, Joshua Wilson, Anna M Espinoza, Kathleen M Sutcliffe, Samantha I Pitts, Alicia I Arbaje, Michelle A Chui, Somer Blair, Dawn Sloan, Masheika Jackson, Ayse P Gurses

JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e57878

Preliminary Assessment of an Ambulatory Device Dedicated to Upper Airway Muscle Training in Patients With Sleep Apnea: Proof-of-Concept Study

Preliminary Assessment of an Ambulatory Device Dedicated to Upper Airway Muscle Training in Patients With Sleep Apnea: Proof-of-Concept Study

The high success rate in this study was likely mainly due to the adjustments that were made to the experimental set-up in order to make it ambulatory. However, in our success rate calculation, we did not take into account the results of the game sessions, which also involved a learning process and accounted for about half the duration of a training session. These games were designed mainly to boost the patients’ motivation to continue the program.

Patrice Roberge, Jean Ruel, André Bégin-Drolet, Jean Lemay, Simon Gakwaya, Jean-François Masse, Frédéric Sériès

JMIR Biomed Eng 2024;9:e51901

The Association Between Telemedicine Use and Changes in Health Care Usage and Outcomes in Patients With Congestive Heart Failure: Retrospective Cohort Study

The Association Between Telemedicine Use and Changes in Health Care Usage and Outcomes in Patients With Congestive Heart Failure: Retrospective Cohort Study

Telemedicine was seen as an effective pandemic response strategy to allow physicians to manage ambulatory patients with chronic disease while reducing the risks of viral transmission to health care providers and other patients and conserve personal protective equipment (PPE) [2]. The uptake of telemedicine during the first wave of the pandemic was between 38%-77% across different countries with no signs of a return to prepandemic levels [1,3].

Cherry Chu, Vess Stamenova, Jiming Fang, Ahmad Shakeri, Mina Tadrous, R Sacha Bhatia

JMIR Cardio 2022;6(2):e36442

Barriers to and Facilitators of Automated Patient Self-scheduling for Health Care Organizations: Scoping Review

Barriers to and Facilitators of Automated Patient Self-scheduling for Health Care Organizations: Scoping Review

Reference 3: Timeliness in ambulatory care treatment. Reference 28: Ambulatory access: improving scheduling increases patient satisfaction and revenue Reference 82: Health care access in rural areas: evidence that hospitalization for ambulatory care-sensitiveambulatory

Elizabeth W Woodcock

J Med Internet Res 2022;24(1):e28323

Best Practices for Integrating Medical Students Into Telehealth Visits

Best Practices for Integrating Medical Students Into Telehealth Visits

In this paper, we describe strategies for effectively integrating medical students into telehealth visits in the ambulatory setting. We derive our approach from the educational literature and from our extensive experience with direct recommendations for teachers who have integrated or wish to integrate learners into telehealth visits.

Maria Wamsley, Laeesha Cornejo, Irina Kryzhanovskaya, Brian W Lin, Joseph Sullivan, Jordan Yoder, Tali Ziv

JMIR Med Educ 2021;7(2):e27877