Published on in Vol 13 (2024)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/58288, first published .
Testing the Effectiveness of a Mobile Smartphone App Designed to Improve the Mental Health of Junior Physicians: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Testing the Effectiveness of a Mobile Smartphone App Designed to Improve the Mental Health of Junior Physicians: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Testing the Effectiveness of a Mobile Smartphone App Designed to Improve the Mental Health of Junior Physicians: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Journals

  1. Muñoz-Ortega S, Alvarado Muñoz R, Santamaria Guayaquil D, Pluas-Borja J, Faytong-Haro M. Mobile-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Health Care Workers’ Mental Health in Ecuador: Quasi-Experimental Study. JMIR Human Factors 2025;12:e58943 View
  2. Foley G, Cassiano M, Ricciardelli R. Views on the usability and usefulness of the PeerConnect app among Ontario public safety professionals. DIGITAL HEALTH 2025;11 View
  3. Gribkova I. Using mobile apps to improve mental health (literature review). HEALTH CARE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION 2025;69(6):561 View
  4. Lai L, Burger A, Lipscomb R, Dinh R, Francis-Taylor R, Counson I, Vaughan P, Deady M, Kalucy M, Dean K, Harvey S, Sanatkar S. Digital intervention to improve medical students’ mental health and wellbeing: evaluating an adapted version of the Shift smartphone application for early-career physicians in a medical student cohort. Psychology, Health & Medicine 2025:1 View