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Mental Health and Coping Strategies of Health Communicators Who Faced Online Abuse During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Mixed Methods Study

Mental Health and Coping Strategies of Health Communicators Who Faced Online Abuse During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Mixed Methods Study

Inductive coding techniques were used to generate themes around mental health and resilience. Deductive coding techniques were used to identify emotion- and problem-focused coping strategies from the model developed by Lazarus and Folkman [17] and the study by Scarduzio et al [21]. Patterns across the excerpts were noted, and our team met 4 times to collectively categorize and interpret themes.

Lisa Wight, Chris Tenove, Saima Hirani, Heidi Tworek

JMIR Infodemiology 2025;5:e68483

Digital Health Resilience and Well-Being Interventions for Military Members, Veterans, and Public Safety Personnel: Environmental Scan and Quality Review

Digital Health Resilience and Well-Being Interventions for Military Members, Veterans, and Public Safety Personnel: Environmental Scan and Quality Review

For example, enhanced community well-being has been shown to lead to an increased likelihood of a resilience response [16,17] and has potential positive effects across other domains of well-being and systems surrounding the individual [18,19]. Access to holistic care is essential to promoting resilience. Resilience is understood by the authors to be a system’s process of adaptation (eg, individuals, groups, and organizations) following adversity or risk exposure.

Rashell R Allen, Myrah A Malik, Carley Aquin, Lucijana Herceg, Suzette Brémault-Phillips, Phillip R Sevigny

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e64098

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

Examine the effectiveness of the CARE-HF intervention on study outcomes (HF self-care, HF symptoms, health care utilization, depressive symptoms, anxiety, health-related quality of life, stress, resilience, and coping), process (problem-solving), and antecedent (social support) in a sample of rural veterans with HF (N=100) at baseline and 3, 6, 12, and 18 months from baseline.

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

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e63498

Using the Community Resilience Model and Project ECHO to Build Resiliency in Direct Support Professionals: Protocol for a Longitudinal Survey

Using the Community Resilience Model and Project ECHO to Build Resiliency in Direct Support Professionals: Protocol for a Longitudinal Survey

Stress responses in individuals, including those with ID/A, can be moderated by factors that increase resilience. Resilience is defined as a process of interactive adaptation that facilitates coping in the face of adversity linked with a person’s neurological and psychological makeup and socioecological contexts [4]. Fostering resilience for both service providers and individuals with ID/A can enhance their adaptive stress responses across all domains of functioning.

Kristina Puzino Lenker, Laura L Felix, Sarah Cichy, Erik Lehman, Jeanne M Logan, Michael Murray, Jennifer L Kraschnewski

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e59913

Effectiveness of Adaptation of a Resilience-Building Intervention Among Individuals With Adverse Childhood Experience: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Effectiveness of Adaptation of a Resilience-Building Intervention Among Individuals With Adverse Childhood Experience: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Resilience is considered to be pertinent in the association between emotional problems and ACEs. Studies have depicted that resilience is a protective factor that can propel an individual to successfully address adverse experiences [29]. Thus, resilience is regarded as playing a protective role in the relationship between emotional disorders and ACE [29-31].

Jun Kiat, Mahadir Ahmad, Caryn Mei Hsien Chan, Satirah Zainalabidin, Michael Ungar, Ponnusamy Subramaniam

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e56826

Development of a Web-Based Intervention for Middle Managers to Enhance Resilience at the Individual, Team, and Organizational Levels in Health Care Systems: Multiphase Study

Development of a Web-Based Intervention for Middle Managers to Enhance Resilience at the Individual, Team, and Organizational Levels in Health Care Systems: Multiphase Study

This included the revision of reviews and systematic reviews (after 2019) on the concept of resilience, experimental studies measuring the effectiveness of recent programs designed to enhance the resilience of health care professionals, and the content of different scales for measuring resilience. In particular, this search was aimed at identifying experiences and successful strategies [16].

Eva Gil-Hernández, Irene Carrillo, Jimmy Martin-Delgado, Daniel García-Torres, José Joaquín Mira

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e67263

Identifying the Minimal Clinically Important Difference in Emotion Regulation Among Youth Using the JoyPop App: Survey Study

Identifying the Minimal Clinically Important Difference in Emotion Regulation Among Youth Using the JoyPop App: Survey Study

Reference 2: Adverse childhood experiences and building resilience with the JoyPop app: evaluation study Reference 4: User perspectives on a resilience-building app (JoyPop): qualitative studyresilience

Jaidyn Charlton, Ishaq Malik, Angela M Ashley, Amanda Newton, Elaine Toombs, Fred Schmidt, Janine V Olthuis, Kristine Stasiuk, Tina Bobinski, Aislin Mushquash

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e64483

Resilience Informatics in Public Health: Qualitative Analysis of Conference Proceedings

Resilience Informatics in Public Health: Qualitative Analysis of Conference Proceedings

To answer these questions, input is needed from frontline workers across diverse fields, areas of expertise, and levels of implementation in public health and resilience areas. On November 20, 2023, the University of Arizona hosted a workshop, titled Resilience Informatics in Public Health, with experts from a variety of relevant fields, including resilience, public health, climate, informatics, policy, and technology.

Maiya G Block Ngaybe, Lidia Azurdia Sierra, Andrew McNair, Myla Gonzalez, Mona Arora, Kacey Ernst, Enrique Noriega-Atala, M Sriram Iyengar

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e63217

Resilience Training Web App for National Health Service Keyworkers: Pilot Usability Study

Resilience Training Web App for National Health Service Keyworkers: Pilot Usability Study

Resilience allows individuals to manage everyday challenges and changes. For health care professionals who are working in highly emotive and stressful situations, resilience skills are particularly important [1]. It is well established that frontline staff such as nurses are particularly at risk of stress due to factors such as long shifts, organizational pressures, and the emotional impact of their work [2].

Joanna Burrell, Felicity Baker, Matthew Russell Bennion

JMIR Med Educ 2025;11:e51101

Prevalence and Independent Predictors of Anxiety and Depression Among Elementary and High School Educators: Cross-Sectional Study

Prevalence and Independent Predictors of Anxiety and Depression Among Elementary and High School Educators: Cross-Sectional Study

The Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) was used to assess resilience. BRS scores of 1 to 2.99 indicate low resilience, 3 to 4.30 suggest normal resilience, and 4.31 to 5.00 suggest high resilience [35]. Perceived stress was measured using the Perceived Stress Scale-10 (PSS-10). A PSS-10 score of ≤26 indicates low perceived stress, while a score of ≥27 indicates high perceived stress [36]. The BRS and the PSS-10 have Cronbach α values of 0.78 and 0.82, respectively, indicating good internal consistency [37,38].

Belinda Agyapong, Pamela Brett-MacLean, Adedamola Orimalade, Raquel da Luz Dias, Yifeng Wei, Vincent Israel Opoku Agyapong

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e60760