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Compliance and Satisfaction With a Protocol for Identifying Novel Targets to Support Postpartum Opioid Use Disorder Recovery: Prospective Cohort Study

Compliance and Satisfaction With a Protocol for Identifying Novel Targets to Support Postpartum Opioid Use Disorder Recovery: Prospective Cohort Study

Completion rates by study group, time point, and procedure: (a) visit completion by study group, (b) compliance with in-visit procedure over time by modality and group, and (c) compliance with out-of-visit procedure over time by modality and group. OUD: opioid use disorder. Among the subgroup of participants who completed the study satisfaction surveys, results indicate that the study was well tolerated over time with no significant differences by study groups (Table 2).

Alicia M Allen, Linnea B Linde-Krieger, Jendar Deschenes, Stephanie Mallahan, Alexandra Harris, Mariana Felix, Arushi Chalke, Alma Anderson, Priyanka Sharma, Katherine M King, Maddy T Grant, James Baurley, Lela Rankin, Stacey Tecot

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e77899


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

Testing rates based on allocation era (A) and sensitivity analysis for testing rates (B). TM: text messaging; UC: usual care or control. Relative testing rate of intensive text messaging versus usual care or control and sensitivity analyses (effect within Social Vulnerability Index levels)a. a See Table S1 in Multimedia Appendix 4 for estimates and tests for participants enrolled under each allocation era. b RTR: relative testing rate. c SVI: Social Vulnerability Index.

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


Feasibility and Acceptability of a mHealth Patient Navigation Intervention to Increase Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Uptake in Racially and Ethnically Diverse Sexual and Gender Minority Youth in Los Angeles (PrEPresent): Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Feasibility and Acceptability of a mHealth Patient Navigation Intervention to Increase Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Uptake in Racially and Ethnically Diverse Sexual and Gender Minority Youth in Los Angeles (PrEPresent): Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Baseline demographic characteristics of sexual and gender minority youth in the Pr EPresent studya,b. a2 “Decline to answer” in control. b1 “Don’t know” in intervention. The Patient Activation Measure was used, with a Cronbach α of 0.93, to measure participants’ activation at each survey timepoint [29]. Both study arms scored within the high-level activation category (category 4, defined as 67.1‐100 points) at baseline. Patient activation scores remained stable across both arms over the 3 months (Table 2).

Sam Calvetti, Bryan Lei, Jacob B Stocks, Matthew T Rosso, Manuel Puentes, Ramon Durazo-Arvizu, Lindsay Slay, Michele D Kipke, Lisa B Hightow-Weidman

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e69255