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Published on in Vol 7 (2024)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/58663, first published .
Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study

Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study

Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study

Journals

  1. Hua R, Carter M, O’Brien M, Pitt J, Kwon S, Manworren R, Oscherwitz G, Edobor A, Chen A, Ghomrawi H, Abdullah F, Jayaraman A. Biorhythms derived from consumer wearables predict postoperative complications in children. Science Advances 2025;11(28) View
  2. Javed J, Islam S. Artificial intelligence and electronic health records: a narrative review of current applications and challenges in pediatric surgery. World Journal of Pediatric Surgery 2025;8(5):e001100 View
  3. Zheng H, Sharma P, Johnson M, Danieletto M, Alleva E, Charney A, Nadkarni G, Sarabu C, Eskofier B, Ahuja Y, Richter F, Klang E, Gangadharan S, Richter F, Holmes E, Glicksberg B. Integration of Artificial Intelligence and Wearable Devices in Pediatric Clinical Care: A Review. Bioengineering 2025;12(12):1320 View
  4. Bartel C, Chen L, Durica K, Fedor J, Palm A, Selwood T, Lakhia P, Thomas R, Donovan H, Low C. Clinician Perspectives on Integrating Mobile Sensor Data Into Cancer Care: Mixed Methods Study. JMIR Cancer 2026;12:e86412 View
  5. Haridas C, Potter A, Srinivasan D, Hwang T, Seastedt K, Neilan T, Nguyen T, Lee H, Li X, Yang C. Increasing Use of Wearable Devices for Health or Activity Tracking Among Adults with Chronic Diseases in the US. Journal of the American College of Surgeons 2026;242(6):1580 View