Satisfaction and effectiveness of a digital health tool to improve health behavior counseling among adolescent and young adult cancer survivors: a randomized controlled pilot trial
Maura M. Kepper(Washington University in St. Louis), Randi E. Foraker(Washington University in St. Louis), Robert J. Hayashi(Washington University in St. Louis), Callie Walsh‐Bailey(Washington University in St. Louis), Loni Parrish(Washington University in St. Louis), Zoe Maya Miller(Washington University in St. Louis), Ross C. Brownson(Washington University in St. Louis), Yan Yan(Capital Medical University), Lisa de las Fuentes(Washington University in St. Louis), Min Zhao(Washington University in St. Louis), Russell E. Glasgow(University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus)
Cited by 5
Related Papers
Evaluating the public health impact of health promotion interventions: the RE-AIM framework.
|American Journal of Public Health|1999|7.2k
The summary of diabetes self-care activities measure: results from 7 studies and a revised scale.
|Diabetes Care|2000|2.6k
RE-AIM Planning and Evaluation Framework: Adapting to New Science and Practice With a 20-Year Review
|Frontiers in Public Health|2019|2.5k
Why Don’t We See More Translation of Health Promotion Research to Practice? Rethinking the Efficacy-to-Effectiveness Transition
|American Journal of Public Health|2003|1.9k
The dynamic sustainability framework: addressing the paradox of sustainment amid ongoing change
|Implementation Science|2013|1.8k