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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.
JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e65489
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The research team (n=18) consisted of Canadian experts in co-design methodologies with diverse backgrounds and expertise in HIV research, equity-informed health care, health service research, and implementation science. This interdisciplinary team included Ph D-trained researchers and clinicians specializing in geriatrics, family medicine, and infectious diseases, as well as occupational therapists, social workers, health service administrators, and peer researchers with lived experience.
JMIR Aging 2025;8:e67122
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Multidisciplinary Oncology Education Among Postgraduate Trainees: Systematic Review
oncology training reported by trainees compared to program directors (P
135 general surgery residents
Limited proportion of residents indicated receiving multidisciplinary training: radiation oncology (23%), chemotherapy (31%), and palliative medicine (53%)
Majority (82%) of residents endorsed further multidisciplinary training
29 hematology residents and 3 hematology fellows
56.3% did not receive geriatric oncology teaching
96.9% endorsed the inclusion of geriatric training in hematology residency
Residents (n=
JMIR Med Educ 2025;11:e63655
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A total of 194 articles were included in data extraction (n=104, 53.6% adult; n=90, 46.4% pediatric), with 4 studies being coded as both pediatric and adult given that the study sample spanned both populations.
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e58947
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Among non-Hispanic White caregivers who manage medications (n=1633), the mean number of participants assisting with medications was 2.4 (range 1-9). Caregivers who helped with medications were 17.3% (282/1633) spouses, 33.9% (555/1633) children, 2.9% (48/1633) grandchildren, 9.6% (157/1633) others, 35.5% (580/1633) paid helpers, and 0.7% (11/1633) siblings.
Among Black or African American caregivers (n=799), the mean number of caregivers assisting with medications was 2.8 (range 1-9).
Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e64499
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Cluster 1 (n=26, 16.7%) exhibited the lowest willingness (Factor 2: mean 1.9, SD 0.7) and digital competencies (Factor 2: mean 1.9, SD 0.7). Correspondingly, this cluster demonstrated the highest negative expectancies of DHIs (Factor 3: mean 3.8, SD 0.3) and low expectations regarding patients’ adequate competencies and willingness to use DHIs (Factor 4: mean 2.2, SD 0.7).
JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e59757
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The majority of these resources were studies (n=243), data dictionaries (n=143), questionnaires (n=78), substudies (n=49), and other data collection instruments (n=35). Remaining resources included datasets (n=19), manuals of operations (SOPs; n=15), other study documents (n=15), registries or secondary data sources (n=9), case report forms (n=5), codebooks (n=5), interview schemes and themes (n=4), data management plans (n=3), other resource types (n=2), and statistical analysis plans (n=1).
JMIR Med Inform 2025;13:e63906
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