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Use, Usability, and Experience Testing of a Digital Health Intervention to Support Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management: Mixed Methods Study

Use, Usability, and Experience Testing of a Digital Health Intervention to Support Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management: Mixed Methods Study

Alongside demonstrating the efficacy of DHIs, the use of and engagement with DHIs are considered important when evaluating their effectiveness [24,25] and may be regarded as a prerequisite for the intervention to achieve positive outcomes [26]. Engagement, defined as users’ regular interaction with a part or all of the DHI [27], has been typically conceptualized as “use” [24], with a focus on temporal patterns (eg, frequency and duration) and depth (eg, use of specific intervention content) [28,29].

Courtney J Lightfoot, Thomas J Wilkinson, Roseanne E Billany, Gurneet K Sohansoha, Noemi Vadaszy, Ella C Ford, Melanie J Davies, Thomas Yates, Alice C Smith, Matthew P M Graham-Brown

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e75845

A Brief Engagement Intervention Adapted for Racial and Ethnic Minority Young Adults in Mental Health Services: Protocol for a Pilot Optimization Trial

A Brief Engagement Intervention Adapted for Racial and Ethnic Minority Young Adults in Mental Health Services: Protocol for a Pilot Optimization Trial

The new candidate behavioral intervention components seek to (1) enhance perceived cultural competency of providers, (2) improve hope (ie, self-belief and outcome expectancy that recovery is possible), and (3) improve self-efficacy for treatment engagement (ie, decrease perceived difficulty or increase control of engagement behaviors). Hope and self-efficacy were targeted as mediators in the previous trial of Just Do You but did not change [50]. Conceptual model.

Kiara L Moore, Aaron H Rodwin, Marya Gwadz, Doris F Chang, Linda M Collins, Michelle R Munson

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e68885

Engaging Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Research: Qualitative Substudy of Factors Impacting Participation

Engaging Community-Dwelling Older Adults in Research: Qualitative Substudy of Factors Impacting Participation

A lack of engagement, even at in-person events, was interpreted by community coordinators as further proof of public skepticism: There is resentment about pouring resources into ”research” instead of simply meeting basic needs. I was able to offer a presentation about the ACTing Collectively project . . .

Bryah Boutilier, Grace Warner, Brianna Wolfe, Sorayya Askari, Elaine Moody, Parisa Ghanouni, Tanya Packer

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e74191

Engaging Older Adults With Cognitive Impairment in Digital Health Technologies: Protocol for a Scoping Review

Engaging Older Adults With Cognitive Impairment in Digital Health Technologies: Protocol for a Scoping Review

These findings underscore the importance of increasing engagement, as there is evidence that higher levels of engagement are associated with better cognitive health [20]. For older people living with cognitive impairment, engagement with digital health technologies can be particularly challenging, and even more so for people from cultural or linguistic minority groups.

Sié Mathieu Aymar Romaric Da, Maxime Sasseville, Marie-Soleil Hardy, Idrissa Beogo, Amédé Gogovor, Samira Amil, Achille R Yameogo, Frédéric Bergeron, Anik Giguere, Annie LeBlanc, James Plaisimond, Carole Rivard-Lacroix, Marie-Pierre Gagnon

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e65515

The Role of Early Engagement in a Self-Directed, Digital Mental Health Intervention for Adolescent Anxiety: Moderated Regression Analysis

The Role of Early Engagement in a Self-Directed, Digital Mental Health Intervention for Adolescent Anxiety: Moderated Regression Analysis

It is possible that greater effort or more in-depth use of content and tasks early in the program (better engagement) may facilitate interest, trigger symptom improvements, and sustained engagement over time.

Emma-Leigh Senyard, Arlen Rowe, Govind Krishnamoorthy, Susan H Spence, Caroline Donovan, Sonja March

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e60523

Types of HPV Vaccine Misinformation Circulating on Twitter (X) That Parents Find Most Concerning: Insights From a Cross-Sectional Survey and Content Analysis

Types of HPV Vaccine Misinformation Circulating on Twitter (X) That Parents Find Most Concerning: Insights From a Cross-Sectional Survey and Content Analysis

This category was associated with significantly higher levels of audience engagement (a sum of “like” count, retweet count, and reply count) in our previous study, which may suggest that viewers found this information particularly concerning. Tweets containing entirely duplicate information were removed. Tweets that contained partially duplicate information along with unique information were included.

Jennifer C Morgan, Sarah Badlis, Katharine J Head, Gregory Zimet, Joseph N Cappella, Melanie L Kornides

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e54657

Trustworthiness of Web-Based Pharmacy Apps in Pakistan Based on the Mobile App Rating Scale: Content Analysis and Quality Evaluation

Trustworthiness of Web-Based Pharmacy Apps in Pakistan Based on the Mobile App Rating Scale: Content Analysis and Quality Evaluation

The engagement component of the assessment evaluates many factors including enjoyment, interest among users, personalization, interaction (including alerts, messages, signals, and comments), and suitability for the target demographic. The functionality component encompasses 4 key aspects related to operational efficiency, including (1) utilization, (2) directions, (3) conceptual flow, and (4) gestural design.

Anum Sattar, Hina Rehman, Safila Naveed, Sumaira Khadim, Nargis Khan, Ahmad Furqan Kazi, Wajid Syed, Mahmood Basil A Al-Rawi, Shazia Jamshed

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e59884

Evaluating User Engagement With a Real-Time, Text-Based Digital Mental Health Support App: Cross-Sectional, Retrospective Study

Evaluating User Engagement With a Real-Time, Text-Based Digital Mental Health Support App: Cross-Sectional, Retrospective Study

Furthermore, challenges, such as user engagement [6,9,13], remain. Baumel et al [13]—in an evaluation of 93 digital mental health care apps—found that only 4% of users opened the evaluated apps daily. Accordingly, understanding how people engage with digital mental health care apps is needed to facilitate design elements that may encourage engagement.

Edward Coffield, Khadeja Kausar

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e66301