JMIR Research Protocols
Protocols, grant proposals, registered reports (RR1)
Editor-in-Chief:
Amy Schwartz, MSc, Ph.D., Scientific Editor at JMIR Publications, Ontario, Canada
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Recent Articles


Pulmonary aspiration of gastric contents is a serious clinical complication, particularly in patients receiving enteral nutrition or undergoing anesthesia. Gastric residual volume (GRV) is a commonly used surrogate marker that can identify delayed gastric emptying and enteral nutrition intolerance, both of which may increase the risk of aspiration. Traditional methods for measuring GRV are invasive and lack standardization. Point-of-care ultrasound (PoCUS) has emerged as a promising, noninvasive bedside alternative. Despite its growing clinical use, there is still no consolidated guidance on PoCUS procedures for GRV assessment in adult patients.

Individuals with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder face a significantly elevated risk of obesity, primarily due to weight gain associated with psychiatric medications and lifestyle factors. While digital self-monitoring tools offer scalable solutions, their application remains underexplored in psychiatric populations. To address these gaps, this type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation study investigates the preliminary effectiveness and implementation feasibility of a mobile health-assisted weight management intervention for patients with severe mental illness.

Managing type 2 diabetes (T2D) requires ongoing attention to diet, physical activity, medication, and blood glucose monitoring. These cumulative demands can lead to diabetes distress, a common emotional strain that affects well-being, self-management, and clinical outcomes. Digital health interventions (DHIs) offer scalable, cost-effective support for both self-management and emotional well-being. However, many DHIs pay limited attention to the needs of underserved groups, who may experience higher distress, face additional barriers to engagement, and are often underrepresented in research. Evidence describing how DHIs are designed, delivered, and experienced across diverse populations remains fragmented, particularly from an equity perspective.

Women who are impacted by diverse forms of violence and structural disadvantage such as poverty, health inequities, and precarious housing experience significant barriers to health care. Outreach is a promising strategy to mitigate barriers to care. Until recently, outreach has focused on women’s behaviors, with less attention paid to the intersecting systemic inequities inclusive of stigma and discrimination, poverty, and compartmentalized health service delivery models that impact care engagement and access.

Shifting surgeries from the stationary to the outpatient setting is seen as a suitable way to increase efficiency in the health care system. A substantial increase in outpatient procedures can therefore be observed internationally—particularly in the field of orthopedics. However, the interests and needs of patients are often insufficiently taken into account in this process. The “Power-AOP” research project was initiated to identify the associated challenges in the area of patient empowerment and to develop solutions.

Tripterygium glycoside tablets (TGTs), a traditional Chinese medicine–based therapy and a type of conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (csDMARD), have shown promise as a cost-effective alternative for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, there is limited evidence regarding the most effective combinations with other csDMARDs, such as methotrexate, leflunomide, and hydroxychloroquine. This study evaluates the 12-week efficacy and safety of TGT-based regimens in patients with moderately active RA.

Unhealthy and unsustainable diets remain a major global challenge, contributing significantly to poor health outcomes, environmental degradation, and social inequalities. Despite growing awareness, individuals face persistent barriers to adopting sustainable dietary practices, including cost, availability, cultural norms, and low food literacy. While digital tools and artificial intelligence (AI) offer promising avenues to support dietary behavior change, few interventions target the household as a unit of change. The WiseFood project addresses this gap by developing AI-supported apps to promote healthier and more sustainable food choices at the household level through co-designed interventions in multisite Living Labs (LLs) across Europe.

Cognitive-communication disorders are pervasive following traumatic brain injury (TBI), disrupting communication at the level of discourse and social interaction. Discourse impairments impact functioning across major life domains, such as work and social relationships, and overall quality of life. Problems with discourse affect all severity levels of TBI and persist over time. Veterans may experience even greater functional decline due to comorbid health conditions (eg, posttraumatic stress disorder, pain). The functional impact and chronicity of discourse impairments following TBI underscore the importance of treating these impairments.

School health policies and practices are key components of health promotion for children and adolescents and play a central role in shaping healthy school environments, reducing health inequities, and fostering intersectoral collaboration between education and health systems. Despite their relevance, systematic and comparable assessments of how these policies and practices are implemented across different national contexts remain limited, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Internationally comparable data are essential to identify strengths, gaps, and priorities for investment in school health.

Nicotine addiction among youth is a continuing public health concern, and vaping serves as a major pathway to nicotine use. Conventional assessments of craving and addiction risk rely on self-reports, which are prone to bias and lack sensitivity to real-time processes. Virtual reality (VR) enables controlled cue exposure while capturing real-time multimodal data, including subjective experiences, behavioral patterns, and physiological responses, which offer a more implicit and dynamic approach to identifying addiction risk.

Despite high prevalence of suicidal ideation and behavior, adolescents and young adults often underuse mental health services due to both structural and personal barriers. Simultaneously, massive social media (SM) expansion has introduced new mental health threats, while also creating vital spaces where adolescents and young adults can express psychological distress, seek support, and access mental health information. Designed as a bridge to care and a counterbalance to digital risks, the Équipe en Ligne de Prévention du Suicide (ELIOS) project connects adolescents and young adults with suicidal ideation or behaviors with a team of professionally trained web clinicians (nurses or psychologists supervised by a psychiatrist) through SM platforms. ELIOS is currently being evaluated within the Online Referral and Intervention to Prevent Adolescent and Young Adult Suicide (ORIAS) trial to assess its efficacy.
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