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Maintaining Resilience and Well-Being in the Era of Climate Change: Protocol of an Acceptability and Feasibility Pilot of the Bee Well Program for Treating Eco-Anxiety in Rural Children Exposed to Natural Hazards

Maintaining Resilience and Well-Being in the Era of Climate Change: Protocol of an Acceptability and Feasibility Pilot of the Bee Well Program for Treating Eco-Anxiety in Rural Children Exposed to Natural Hazards

Young people are also especially vulnerable to direct and indirect exposure to natural hazards [24], in part due to exposure to parental stress [25,26] and erosion of normal support systems [27] at an age where coping skills are still emerging [28].

Suzanne M Cosh, Warren Bartik, Rosie Ryan, Amanda Jefferys, Kaii Fallander, Phillip J Tully, Amy D Lykins

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e69005

Usability and Quality of the JoyPop App: Prospective Evaluation Study

Usability and Quality of the JoyPop App: Prospective Evaluation Study

The Joy Pop app is a mental health app designed to improve resilience through evidence-based features that promote emotion regulation and adaptive coping among youths and emerging adults [19,20]. The Joy Pop app was co-designed by youths, researchers, and service providers [20]. The app’s transdiagnostic focus makes it a valuable addition to usual mental health supports and applicable to a diverse range of students [21,22].

Ishaq Malik, Teagan Neufeld, Aislin Mushquash

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e65472

Virtual Reality for the Prevention and Cessation of Nicotine Vaping in Youths: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Virtual Reality for the Prevention and Cessation of Nicotine Vaping in Youths: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Distinct from the prior VR studies that focused solely on refusal skills for vaping [15], the intervention developed for this study focuses on the determinants of vaping (emotional regulation, coping strategies, and resilience) in addition to prevention and cessation skills (refusal skills, craving management, and cessation resources).

Belinda Borrelli, Daniel Weinstein, Romano Endrighi, Nikki Ling, Kathleen Koval, Lisa M Quintiliani, Kaitlyn Konieczny

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e71961

Personalized mHealth Intervention (StepAdd) for Increasing Physical Activity in Japanese Patients With Type 2 Diabetes: Secondary Analysis of Social Cognitive Theory Measurements of a Single-Arm Pilot Study

Personalized mHealth Intervention (StepAdd) for Increasing Physical Activity in Japanese Patients With Type 2 Diabetes: Secondary Analysis of Social Cognitive Theory Measurements of a Single-Arm Pilot Study

Step Add uses self-mastery and coping strategies to increase self-efficacy and thus increase walking. For self-mastery, Step Add implements achievable but challenging goals, which are adapted weekly, with self-mastery being measured by the goal completion (GC) rate. For coping strategies, Step Add has participants choose a barrier and an associated coping strategy to implement, increasing self-efficacy, with coping strategy use being measured by the strategy implementation (SI) rate.

Kayo Waki, Syunpei Enomoto, Toshimasa Yamauchi, Masaomi Nangaku, Kazuhiko Ohe

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60221

Supporting Physical and Mental Health in Rural Veterans Living With Heart Failure: Protocol for a Nurse-Led Telephone Intervention Study

Supporting Physical and Mental Health in Rural Veterans Living With Heart Failure: Protocol for a Nurse-Led Telephone Intervention Study

Social support and problem-solving are essential coping resources that aid stress management, support resiliency, and enhance coping processes [15,16]. In rural veterans with HF, social support and problem-solving skills are critical to maintaining physical and mental health [8,17,18]. Patients with HF need to appraise and manage diverse symptomatology, adhere to dietary restrictions, cope with negative emotions, and negotiate daily activities [11,12].

Lucinda J Graven, Laurie Abbott, Josef V Hodgkins, Thomas Ledermann, M Bryant Howren

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e63498

New Perspective on Digital Well-Being by Distinguishing Digital Competency From Dependency: Network Approach

New Perspective on Digital Well-Being by Distinguishing Digital Competency From Dependency: Network Approach

Avoidant coping refers to attempts to ignore or evade stressors rather than addressing them by attending to distractive digital activities. This maladaptive coping can reduce overall resilience and exacerbate feelings of stress, anxiety, and dissatisfaction [50].

Si Chen, Omid V Ebrahimi, Cecilia Cheng

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e70483

Women’s Educating and Coping Strategies for Cultivating Supportive Web-Based Spaces for Discussing Sexual and Reproductive Health: Co-Design Study

Women’s Educating and Coping Strategies for Cultivating Supportive Web-Based Spaces for Discussing Sexual and Reproductive Health: Co-Design Study

This combined use is further corroborated by the study of Hernández and Villodas [56], where the sole use of reactive and suppressive coping was discouraged. Only reflective coping (ie, which relates to cognitive reappraisal) was associated with more positive mental health, whereas reactive and suppressive coping (ie, which relates to expressive suppression) were associated with poorer mental health after experiencing microaggressions [56].

Hyeyoung Ryu, Wanda Pratt

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e62716

Text Messaging to Extend School-Based Suicide Prevention: Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Text Messaging to Extend School-Based Suicide Prevention: Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Within such programs, help-seeking, youth-adult connectedness, and strategies for coping and regulating emotion are promising targets, given their documented association with reduced suicidal thoughts, behaviors, and antecedent risk factors [5-9]. However, a key challenge for school-based universal prevention programs remains—reaching a large and diverse array of students, especially those who are less engaged with school.

Anthony R Pisani, Peter A Wyman, Ian Cero, Caroline Kelberman, Kunali Gurditta, Emily Judd, Karen Schmeelk-Cone, David Mohr, David Goldston, Ashkan Ertefaie

JMIR Ment Health 2024;11:e56407

The Relationship Between Self-Compassion and Resilience in the General Population: Protocol for a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

The Relationship Between Self-Compassion and Resilience in the General Population: Protocol for a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Research indicates that self-compassion is positively correlated with psychological well-being and the use of adaptive coping strategies [20,21] while being negatively associated with detrimental symptoms, such as rumination, stress, depression, and anxiety [22]. Furthermore, self-compassion appears to be particularly beneficial during stressful events [23,24].

Xinyi Li, Melina Aikaterini Malli, Theodore D Cosco, Guangyu Zhou

JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e60154