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Epidemiological Characteristics of Intestinal Protozoal Infections and Their Risk Factors in Malaysia: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocol

Epidemiological Characteristics of Intestinal Protozoal Infections and Their Risk Factors in Malaysia: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocol

The second theme will be prevalence, including epidemiology, incidence, epidemiological studies, and observational studies. The third theme will be risk factors and detection methods of intestinal protozoal infection and other similar names used (see detailed list in Multimedia Appendix 2) and then adapted for use in the other databases. The search, the evaluation of the titles and abstracts, and the review of the complete texts will be performed independently by an author.

Nor Shazlina Mizan, Hassanain Al-Talib, Seok Mui Wang

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e66350

Prevalence and Economic Impact of Acute Respiratory Failure in the Prehospital Emergency Medical Service of the Madrid Community: Retrospective Cohort Study

Prevalence and Economic Impact of Acute Respiratory Failure in the Prehospital Emergency Medical Service of the Madrid Community: Retrospective Cohort Study

We present the following article in accordance with the STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology) reporting checklist (Multimedia Appendix 1). The SUMMIRA study is an observational, quantitative, multicenter, and cross-sectional study of patients attended by the EMS of the CAM for 6 years. Between 2014 and 2020, 583,984 persons of the population of the Madrid Community were clinically treated by the CAM ALSs, after a triage in the 112 health emergency telephone number.

Ana María Cintora-Sanz, Cristina Horrillo-García, Víctor Quesada-Cubo, Ana María Pérez-Alonso, Alicia Gutiérrez-Misis

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2025;11:e66179

Exploring the Relationship Between Public Social Media Accounts, Adolescent Mental Health, and Parental Guidance in England: Large Cross-Sectional School Survey Study

Exploring the Relationship Between Public Social Media Accounts, Adolescent Mental Health, and Parental Guidance in England: Large Cross-Sectional School Survey Study

This observational study used only secondary school and FEC data because the questions of interest were only asked to the older students. Participants came from 80 secondary schools and FECs, primarily in 4 regions in England: Oxfordshire, Berkshire, Liverpool, and Milton Keynes. The Ox Well Student Survey 2023 (administered in February-March 2023) collected 42,215 valid consenting responses from 43,735 survey log-ins.

Wakithi Siza Mabaso, Sascha Hein, Gabriela Pavarini, The OxWell Study Team, Mina Fazel

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e57154

EyeMatics: An Ophthalmology Use Case Within the German Medical Informatics Initiative

EyeMatics: An Ophthalmology Use Case Within the German Medical Informatics Initiative

Eye Matics is planned as an observational health technology study at 4 university hospital sites with the aim to include 2 more hospital sites as the technology study is rolled out. All patients who have undergone inpatient or outpatient procedures with IVI and signed BC forms are going to be included. The consent form is crucial for ethical participation, legal requirements, and data sharing according to the guidelines of the MII.

Julian Varghese, Alexander Schuster, Broder Poschkamp, Kemal Yildirim, Johannes Oehm, Philipp Berens, Sarah Müller, Julius Gervelmeyer, Lisa Koch, Katja Hoffmann, Martin Sedlmayr, Vinodh Kakkassery, Oliver Kohlbacher, David Merle, Karl Ulrich Bartz-Schmidt, Marius Ueffing, Dana Stahl, Torsten Leddig, Martin Bialke, Christopher Hampf, Wolfgang Hoffmann, Sebastian Berthe, Dagmar Waltemath, Peter Walter, Myriam Lipprandt, Rainer Röhrig, Jens Julian Storp, Julian Alexander Zimmermann, Lea Holtrup, Tobias Brix, Andreas Stahl, Nicole Eter

JMIR Med Inform 2024;12:e60851

Differences in Use of a Patient Portal Across Sociodemographic Groups: Observational Study of the NHS App in England

Differences in Use of a Patient Portal Across Sociodemographic Groups: Observational Study of the NHS App in England

Reference 23: Uptake and adoption of the NHS app in England: an observational study Reference 40: The effect of 24/7, digital-first, NHS primary care on acute hospital spending: retrospective observationalobservationalDifferences in Use of a Patient Portal Across Sociodemographic Groups: Observational Study of the NHS

Sukriti KC, Chrysanthi Papoutsi, Claire Reidy, Bernard Gudgin, John Powell, Azeem Majeed, Felix Greaves, Anthony A Laverty

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e56320

Peer Review for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study”

Peer Review for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study”

This is the peer-review report for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-Co V-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study.” This paper [1] looks appropriate and relevant. Some corrections are needed. Additionally, none of the figures (except x-rays and study workflow) are properly visible on the PDF or Word version, so I cannot comment on their content. Please provide better-quality pictures, if possible.

Petar Velikov

JMIRx Med 2024;5:e60168

Peer Review for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study”

Peer Review for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study”

This is the peer-review report for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-Co V-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study.” COVID-19–associated hepatitis in children (CAH-C) during the second wave of SARS-Co V-2 infections in Central India: is it a complication or transient phenomenon? The topics of this paper [1] are interesting but the results are not clear and robust.

Mario Coccia

JMIRx Med 2024;5:e59596

Authors’ Response to Peer Reviews of “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study”

Authors’ Response to Peer Reviews of “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study”

This is the authors’ response to peer-review reports for “Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-Co V-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study.” This paper [2] looks appropriate and relevant. Some corrections are needed. Additionally, none of the figures (except x-rays and study workflow) are properly visible on the PDF or Word version, so I cannot comment on their content. Please provide better-quality pictures, if possible.

Sumit Kumar Rawat, Ajit Anand Asati, Nitu Mishra, Ashish Jain, Radha Kanta Ratho

JMIRx Med 2024;5:e59327

Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study

Identification of COVID-19–Associated Hepatitis in Children as an Emerging Complication in the Wake of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: Ambispective Observational Study

In an ambispective (retrospective and follow-up) observational study, records from April to July 2021 were reviewed at a tertiary care public hospital in Central India, which was designated as a dedicated COVID-19 (500 beds) center for the entire region.

Sumit Kumar Rawat, Ajit Anand Asati, Nitu Mishra, Ashish Jain, Radha Kanta Ratho

JMIRx Med 2024;5:e48629