J
John Torous
Researcher at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Publications - 377
Citations - 14976
John Torous is an academic researcher from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 307 publications receiving 8444 citations. Previous affiliations of John Torous include University of California, San Francisco & National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.
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Navigating Ethics in the Digital Age: Introducing Connected and Open Research Ethics (CORE), a Tool for Researchers and Institutional Review Boards.
TL;DR: The CORE initiative is described and a call is made for readers to join the CORE Network and contribute to the bigger conversation on ethics in the digital age.
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Review of Use of Asynchronous Technologies Incorporated in Mental Health Care
Steven Chan,Steven Chan,Luming Li,John Torous,John Torous,David Gratzer,David Gratzer,Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees +7 more
TL;DR: It is important for clinicians to understand the efficacy, assess the ethics, and manage privacy and legal concerns that may arise from using asynchronous technologies.
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Why Psychiatry Needs Data Science and Data Science Needs Psychiatry: Connecting With Technology.
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Preventive digital mental health interventions for children and young people: a review of the design and reporting of research
Aislinn Bergin,Elvira Perez Vallejos,E. Bethan Davies,David Daley,Tamsin Ford,Gordon Thomas Harold,Gordon Thomas Harold,Gordon Thomas Harold,Sarah E Hetrick,Sarah E Hetrick,Megan Kidner,Yunfei Long,Yunfei Long,Sally N Merry,Richard Morriss,Kapil Sayal,Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke,Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke,Jo Robinson,John Torous,Chris Hollis +20 more
TL;DR: This scoping review aimed to examine existing evidence-based DHI interventions and review how well the research literature described factors that researchers need to include in their study designs and reports to support real-world implementation.
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The Emerging Imperative for a Consensus Approach Toward the Rating and Clinical Recommendation of Mental Health Apps.
John Torous,Joseph Firth,Kit Huckvale,Mark E. Larsen,Theodore D. Cosco,Rebekah Carney,Steven Chan,Abhishek Pratap,Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees,Til Wykes,Matcheri S. Keshavan,Helen Christensen +11 more
TL;DR: A narrative review of various schemes toward app evaluations, including commercial app store metrics, government initiatives, patient-centric approaches, point-based scoring, academic platforms, and expert review systems, demonstrate that these different approaches toward app evaluation each offer unique benefits but often do not agree to each other and produce varied conclusions as to which apps are useful or not.