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Patients’ Use of Mobile Health for Self-management of Knee Osteoarthritis: Results of a 6-Week Pilot Study

Patients’ Use of Mobile Health for Self-management of Knee Osteoarthritis: Results of a 6-Week Pilot Study

Patient participants completed a baseline (week 0) semistructured interview and survey evaluation, followed by a 6-week usability period and final (week 6) follow-up survey evaluation. Patients were provided with a weblink to the app 1 week before the launch of the baseline evaluation to allow them sufficient time to familiarize themselves with the main app features (dashboard and symptom tracking, goals, activities, red flags, and resources).

Brittany Shewchuk, Lee A Green, Tanya Barber, Jean Miller, Sylvia Teare, Denise Campbell-Scherer, Kelly J Mrklas, Linda C Li, Nancy Marlett, Tracy Wasylak, Elena Lopatina, Deirdre McCaughey, Deborah A Marshall

JMIR Form Res 2021;5(11):e30495

Co-Design in the Development of a Mobile Health App for the Management of Knee Osteoarthritis by Patients and Physicians: Qualitative Study

Co-Design in the Development of a Mobile Health App for the Management of Knee Osteoarthritis by Patients and Physicians: Qualitative Study

Dot voting prioritization involved participants applying 2 each of must-have (green) and won’t-have (red) stickers to their priority requirements, in any desired configuration. Similarly, S3 participants were given 10 each of desirability (blue) and actionability (yellow) stickers to rank applicable requirements. Votes were tallied by group (patients, physicians, and researchers) and combined with other findings for prioritization. Both sessions helped define the functional requirement characteristics.

Kelly J Mrklas, Tanya Barber, Denise Campbell-Scherer, Lee A Green, Linda C Li, Nancy Marlett, Jean Miller, Brittany Shewchuk, Sylvia Teare, Tracy Wasylak, Deborah A Marshall

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2020;8(7):e17893

Primary Care Pathway for Childhood Asthma: Protocol for a Randomized Cluster-Controlled Trial

Primary Care Pathway for Childhood Asthma: Protocol for a Randomized Cluster-Controlled Trial

From a societal perspective, inadequate asthma control also presents a considerable economic burden due to the costs associated with hospital and emergency department admissions, medications, and caregiver productivity losses [13]. High-quality evidence exists regarding how to best manage childhood asthma in a primary care setting to optimize control and minimize acute disease exacerbations [14-16].

Andrew J Cave, Heather Sharpe, Mark Anselmo, A Dean Befus, Gillian Currie, Christina Davey, Neil Drummond, Jim Graham, Lee A Green, Jeremy Grimshaw, Karen Kam, Donna P Manca, Alberto Nettel-Aguirre, Melissa L Potestio, Brian H Rowe, Shannon D Scott, Tyler Williamson, David W Johnson

JMIR Res Protoc 2016;5(1):e37