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Outdoor Exercise Facility–Based Integrative Mobile Health Intervention to Support Physical Activity, Mental Well-Being, and Exercise Self-Efficacy Among Older Adults With Prefrailty and Frailty in Hong Kong: Pilot Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial Study

Outdoor Exercise Facility–Based Integrative Mobile Health Intervention to Support Physical Activity, Mental Well-Being, and Exercise Self-Efficacy Among Older Adults With Prefrailty and Frailty in Hong Kong: Pilot Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial Study

Among the participants who dropped out, the reasons included loss of contact (n=3) and hospitalization (n=1; see Figure 1). The overall intervention completion rate in the integrative m Health intervention group was nearly 80% (134/170, 78.8%). The average completion rates for individual components were as follows: workshop attendance, 63 out of 68 (93%); self-reported adherence to unsupervised outdoor practice sessions, 36 out of 51 (71%); and self-reported mobile app engagement, 35 out of 51 (69%).

Janet Lok Chun Lee, Arnold Y L Wong, Peter H F Ng, S N Fu, Kenneth N K Fong, Andy S K Cheng, Karen Nga Kwan Lee, Rui Sun, Hao Yi Zhang, Rong Xiao

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e69259

Detection of Depressive Symptoms in College Students Using Multimodal Passive Sensing Data and Light Gradient Boosting Machine: Longitudinal Pilot Study

Detection of Depressive Symptoms in College Students Using Multimodal Passive Sensing Data and Light Gradient Boosting Machine: Longitudinal Pilot Study

In total, 37 participants enrolled, with 10 withdrawing their participation over the course of the study (N=28; mean age 19.96, SD 1.23 years; 15/28, 54% women). Out of 28 participants, 13 (46%) identified as Latine, 10 (36%) as Asian, 3 (14%) as non-Latine White, and 1 (4%) participant as other. Participants’ demographic information is provided in Table 1. Participants’ demographic information (N=28).

Jessica L Borelli, Yuning Wang, Frances Haofei Li, Lyric N Russo, Marta Tironi, Ken Yamashita, Elayne Zhou, Jocelyn Lai, Brenda Nguyen, Iman Azimi, Christopher Marcotullio, Sina Labbaf, Salar Jafarlou, Nikil Dutt, Amir Rahmani

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e67964

Feasibility and Cultural Adaptation of a Community-Engaged Physical Activity Intervention for Hispanic Older Adults: Pilot Study

Feasibility and Cultural Adaptation of a Community-Engaged Physical Activity Intervention for Hispanic Older Adults: Pilot Study

Participants were between the ages of 55 and 70 years, 90% (n=9) were women, 90% preferred Spanish (n=9), and they had a mean education of 11.8 (SD 3.8) years (Table 1). Pre-post pilot participant characteristics (N=10). a Some values are missing from the participant characteristics table due to participant nonresponse: education (n=2); race (n=1); employment status (n=1), and high cholesterol (n=1). All health indicators are based on participant self-report during the baseline screening phone call.

Zvinka Z Zlatar, Mikael Anne Greenwood-Hickman, Lazaro N Martinez Lujan, Julie Cooper, Stefani Florez-Acevedo, David X Marquez, Rosa Gutierrez Aceves, Andrea Paula Vargas, Dori E Rosenberg

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e65489

Effectiveness of a Health Education Program to Reduce Recurrence of Stroke by Controlling Modifiable Risk Factors in a Specialized Hospital in Bangladesh: Randomized Controlled Trial

Effectiveness of a Health Education Program to Reduce Recurrence of Stroke by Controlling Modifiable Risk Factors in a Specialized Hospital in Bangladesh: Randomized Controlled Trial

Study activities of the IG (n=216) and the CG (n=216). CG: control group; IG: intervention group. Trained RA nurses provided health education sessions to participants using a researcher-developed booklet, which was provided to the patients for self-education at home. We delivered 2 health education sessions using a multimedia approach, which included visual aids and interactive discussions, alongside the booklet material.

Mahabuba Afrin, K A T M Ehsanul Huq, Sharif Uddin Khan, Subir Chandra Das, Mohammad Shah Jahirul Hoque Chowdhury, Yasuko Fukuoka, Yasuko Fukushima, Michiko Moriyama

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2025;11:e72233

Impact of Pharmacist-Led Continuous Glucose Monitoring on Clinical Outcomes in People With Type 2 Diabetes in Primary Care: Protocol for a Prospective Cohort Study

Impact of Pharmacist-Led Continuous Glucose Monitoring on Clinical Outcomes in People With Type 2 Diabetes in Primary Care: Protocol for a Prospective Cohort Study

Enrolled participants in the intervention group will wear a CGM sensor (Abbott Free Style Libre 2; n=20) and receive structured diabetes self-management education and support (DSMES) from a pharmacist in a family medicine clinic. Each participant in the intervention group will have 5 visits with a pharmacist. DSMES will be provided in line with the 2022 National Standards for DSMES [21]. A historical cohort will be used to compare outcomes against the intervention group for the primary outcome.

Kevin Cowart, Raechel T White, Kevin Olson, Nicholas W Carris, Karim Hanna, Janice Zgibor

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e67014