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Published on in Vol 9, No 2 (2022): Apr-Jun

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/33706, first published .
Elderly woman in hospital bed using smartphone.

Adoption of a Postoperative Pain Self-Report Tool: Qualitative Study

Adoption of a Postoperative Pain Self-Report Tool: Qualitative Study

Journals

  1. Thiel B, Blaauboer J, Seesing C, Radmanesh J, Koopman S, Kalkman C, Godfried M, Ayatollahi H. Patient self-reported pain and nausea via smartphone following day care surgery, first year results: An observational cohort study. PLOS Digital Health 2024;3(7):e0000342 View
  2. Safaralizade M, Babalhavaeji F, Hariri N, Nooshinfard F. INDICATORS AND COMPONENTS OF HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN IRANIAN HOSPITALS: METASYNTHESIS AND DELPHI APPROACH. Studies in Medical Sciences 2025;35(10):779 View
  3. Øvrebotten C, Hovland R, Låver J, Bentsen S, Moltu C. Healthcare professionals' perceived challenges and benefits of digital patient-reported data for in-hospital postoperative pain monitoring: A qualitative study. International Journal of Nursing Studies 2025;170:105174 View
  4. Huang W, Xing Y, Zhao F, Wang Y. Mobile apps, AI, and teletherapy: a comprehensive review of digital mental health tools for nurses. Frontiers in Public Health 2026;13 View
  5. Gooch D, Price L, Kelly R, Serban R, Aydemir C, Alhalabi O, Leek T, Ramachandran M, Pearce O, Price B. Deploying PainPad for Patient Pain Logging in the Hospital: A Six-year Deployment. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction 2026 View