Search Articles

View query in Help articles search

Search Results (1 to 10 of 1436 Results)

Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS

CSV download: Download all 1,436 search results (up to 5,000 articles maximum)

Effectiveness of Herbal Interventions in the Management of Hypercholesterolemia: Protocol for a Systematic Review

Effectiveness of Herbal Interventions in the Management of Hypercholesterolemia: Protocol for a Systematic Review

This review protocol was prepared and reported in accordance with the PRISMA-P (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols) guidelines and the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. The trial has been registered in PROSPERO (CRD 42024548858). The review will include studies on single or polyherbal drugs in any form and dosage, including those combined with dietary regimens, physical activity, or both.

Anju Aravind, Athul TP, Ribin V P, Deenadayal Devarajan, Anagha M S, Robin Badal, Akanksha Thakur, Krishna Raghava Gangotri, Meera K Bhojani

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e68016


Using ChatGPT-4 for Lay Summarization in Prostate Cancer Research to Advance Patient-Centered Communication: Large-Scale Generative AI Performance Evaluation

Using ChatGPT-4 for Lay Summarization in Prostate Cancer Research to Advance Patient-Centered Communication: Large-Scale Generative AI Performance Evaluation

A P value All journal content used in this study was exclusively obtained from publicly accessible sources. The use of publicly accessible abstracts for scientific analysis complies with the principles of “fair use” as defined by the US Copyright Act (17 US Code § 107) and the corresponding provisions of the German Copyright Act (Urh G, § 51). All referenced materials have been duly cited and acknowledged in accordance with academic standards (Multimedia Appendix 3).

Emily Rinderknecht, Simon U Engelmann, Veronika Saberi, Clemens Kirschner, Anton P Kravchuk, Anna Schmelzer, Johannes Breyer, Christopher Goßler, Roman Mayr, Christian Gilfrich, Maximilian Burger, Dominik von Winning, Hendrik Borgmann, Christian Wülfing, Axel S Merseburger, Maximilian Haas, Matthias May

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e76598


Physicians’ Use of Electronic Health Record Data Elements and Decision Support Tools in Heart Failure Management: User-Centered Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Physicians’ Use of Electronic Health Record Data Elements and Decision Support Tools in Heart Failure Management: User-Centered Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Cardiologists more frequently relied on diagnostic tests for inpatient HF treatment decisions than general medicine physicians (mean [SD] overall frequency, 4.66 [0.50] vs 4.44 [0.64]; P=.012). However, general medicine physicians relied on problem lists more than cardiologists (mean [SD] overall frequency, 4.63 [0.58] vs 4.43 [0.72]; P=.034).

Mohamed S Ali, Bruna Oewel, Kaitlyn M Greer, Sabah Ganai, Mark W Newman, Kelly Murdoch-Kitt, Scott L Hummel, Michael P Dorsch

JMIR Cardio 2025;9:e79239


User Engagement and Experiences With an Online Unsupervised Tai Chi Program for People With Knee Osteoarthritis: Mixed Methods Process Evaluation Nested in a Randomized Controlled Trial

User Engagement and Experiences With an Online Unsupervised Tai Chi Program for People With Knee Osteoarthritis: Mixed Methods Process Evaluation Nested in a Randomized Controlled Trial

In a randomized controlled trial (RCT), we found that this intervention led to greater improvements in pain (mean difference –1.4 units, 95% CI –2.1 to –0.7; P Therefore, the aim of this study was to explore user engagement (adherence) and experiences (satisfaction, recommendation likelihood, credibility, usability, acceptability, and positive and negative aspects) with an online unsupervised Tai Chi intervention among people with knee osteoarthritis.

Shiyi Julia Zhu, Rana S Hinman, Rachel K Nelligan, Peixuan Li, Anurika P De Silva, Jenny Harrison, Alexander J Kimp, Kim L Bennell

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2025;12:e82115


Mobile Intervention for Increasing COVID-19 Testing in K-12 Schools Serving Disadvantaged Communities: Randomized Controlled Trial of SCALE-UP Counts

Mobile Intervention for Increasing COVID-19 Testing in K-12 Schools Serving Disadvantaged Communities: Randomized Controlled Trial of SCALE-UP Counts

Aggregating across allocation eras, the testing rate was 1.5 times higher in the TM arm than in the UC arm (21.6% vs 14.4%, RTR=1.50, 95% CI 1.35-1.67; P Relative testing rate of intensive text messaging versus usual care or control and sensitivity analyses (average treatment effect). a RTR: relative testing rate. b MAR: missing at random. Testing rates based on allocation era (A) and sensitivity analysis for testing rates (B). TM: text messaging; UC: usual care or control.

Yelena P Wu, Jonathan J Chipman, Leighann Kolp, Tammy K Stump, Tatyana V Kuzmenko, Guilherme Del Fiol, Benjamin Haaland, Kimberly A Kaphingst, Roger Brooks, Adam L Hersh, Hannah L Brady, Kelly J Lundberg, Neng Wan, Courtney Carroll, Brian Orleans, Jennifer Wirth, David W Wetter

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e79775


Capturing Movement Behaviors in Latinas: Feasibility, Validity, and Acceptability Study of an Ecological Momentary Assessment Protocol

Capturing Movement Behaviors in Latinas: Feasibility, Validity, and Acceptability Study of an Ecological Momentary Assessment Protocol

There was no difference in odds of participants completing the EMA prompt (vs not) depending on the amount of MVPA engaged in in the 30-minute window around the EMA prompt (P>.05). However, Latinas were more likely to complete an EMA prompt if they engaged in more SB (odds ratio [OR] 1.04, 95% CI 1.01-1.06) and less LPA (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.94-0.99) in the 30-minute window around the EMA prompt.

Jaclyn P Maher, Peyton A Greco, Eugenia Camacho Fernandez, Brynn L Hudgins, Sandra E Echeverria

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e75855