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Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 982 JMIR mHealth and uHealth
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We demonstrated the feasibility of implementing a smartphone-based mobile health (m Health) intervention for adolescents, and findings suggested that this innovative tool could result in significant improvements in asthma self-efficacy, as well as clinically significant improvements in ACT scores [23]. among at-risk adolescents. Next, we conducted a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) test among 34 adolescents over 6 months to compare the use of the PEAKm AAP prototype in paper-based AAPs [24].
JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e69903
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Reference 6: The influence of digital literacy on mHealth app usability: the mediating role of patientmhealth
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e64955
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Reference 8: Patients’ perceptions of mHealth apps: meta-ethnographic review of qualitative studies Reference 9: What is the clinical value of mHealth for patients?mhealthSecurity and Privacy of mHealth and uHealth Usability of Apps and User Perceptions of mHealth
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e57279
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Mobile health (m Health) devices, such as smartphones and wearables, allow patients to log symptoms actively through numerical scales or visual tools [1-5]. They can also passively capture high-resolution streams of health-related and contextual information, such as sleep, physical activity, or weather with minimal burden [3,5].
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e64889
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With support from our industry partner and community stakeholders, the research infrastructure created by this project is expected to produce more innovative mobile health (m Health) interventions that can be scaled up rapidly in the future.
JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e69303
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As the use of mobile health (m Health) has grown, so has interest in how patients engage with it. Indeed, most studies of m Health interventions include some measure of user engagement, ranging from app logins to message response rates [16]; however, very few capture the heterogeneity of patient interaction styles. The notion of digital phenotyping, more generally (characterizing interaction with a range of digital health tools), is a nascent but growing field [17].
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e72875
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The rapid growth of mobile technologies and their popularity worldwide led to solutions to address problems within health care systems (mobile health [m Health]). Thus, mobile phones have become popular tools to support medical or public health, offering new possibilities for diagnosis, treatment, interventions, m Health apps, and training [16].
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e72360
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Smoking cessation programs using mobile health (m Health) technologies have the potential to cost-effectively reach individuals who smoke at a population level [10-12]. Specifically, m Health cessation interventions delivered through smartphones can reach a large population of individuals who smoke in the United States, as 90% of US adults own a smartphone [13].
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e67630
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mhealthEvaluation and Research Methodology for mHealth Usability of Apps and User Perceptions of mHealth Mobile Health (mhealth)
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e59965
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