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RESEARCH PAPER ANALYSIS

Comparing Stakeholders' Perspectives on Parkinson Disease Management and Digital Technologies: Exploratory International Survey.

AI interpretation is pending for this paper.

PMID42160536
JournalJMIR formative research
Publication Date2026-05-20
Ingested2026-05-20 10:30 PM
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ABSTRACT

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BACKGROUND: Parkinson disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that poses complex challenges for persons with PD, informal caregivers, and health care professionals. With growing interest in digital and predictive artificial intelligence (AI) tools for disease management, understanding the needs and digital readiness of these stakeholder groups is crucial. OBJECTIVE: This work aims to (1) identify digital practices for PD management among persons with PD, at-risk individuals, caregivers, and health care professionals; (2) compare these practices across groups; (3) explore stakeholder desires for AI-based tools; and (4) assess alignments and gaps to inform tailored AI solutions. METHODS: An anonymous cross-sectional online survey of an exploratory nature was distributed (from December 2024 to October 2025) in 5 languages and completed by 255 respondents. Descriptive statistics summarized responses to 41 questions, including stakeholder-specific items. χ2 tests were performed to examine stakeholder differences in desired AI features. RESULTS: Interest in predictive AI was high across stakeholder groups. Symptom tracking was the most desired feature (selected by more than 76% of the respondents), and personalized treatment recommendations came second for both persons with PD and health care professionals; however, stakeholder priorities diverged in other areas. Health care professionals rated improving patient and informal caregiver engagement as significantly more important than persons with PD did, χ21 (n=205)=34.78, P<.001, and Cramer V=0.41. Despite considerable interest, the reported use of digital tools was limited, as most persons with PD did not use symptom-tracking apps or wearables, nor were they currently monitoring their condition, although many expressed intentions to begin. CONCLUSIONS: While predictive AI tools were viewed positively across groups, there were significant gaps in stakeholder preferences, highlighting the importance of tailored, context-aware design. Early diagnosis was not prioritized by persons with PD or health care professionals, likely reflecting the complexity of diagnosing PD in the absence of disease-modifying therapies. Coupled with the emphasis placed on preventive lifestyle guidance by persons with PD and those at risk, this highlights the importance of actionability in AI-based monitoring and prediction. Such actionability may also enhance perceived relevance and uptake, given that reported interest in digital health tools and self-tracking exceeded actual use. These findings offer early-stage insight to guide the development of future AI-based solutions for PD.

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B, Biointerfaces 86.0 13 Neuroprotective roles of klotho: Molecular pathways and therapeutic implications for cognitive health in neurological and psychiatric diseases. Experimental physiology 84.0 14 Flavonoid Rutin Reduces Intestinal Inflammation in an Experimental Model of Parkinson's Disease. Neurotoxicity research 70.0 15 Nanostructured Lipid Carriers Enhance Brain Delivery and Antioxidant Efficacy of a Small-Molecule MAO B Inhibitor for Neurodegenerative Disease Therapy. Molecular pharmaceutics 78.0 16 Pathophysiological Role of the Gut Brain Axis in Parkinson's Disease: From Microbial Metabolites and Intestinal Permeability to Central Neuroinflammation. Current neurovascular research 86.0 17 Parkinson's Disease: From Metabolism to Genetics-A Comprehensive Review. Current issues in molecular biology 86.0 18 Navigating the cholesterol maze: Key insights on use of statins in neurodegenerative disorders. Neuroprotection (Chichester, England) 76.0 19 Integrative network pharmacology delineates dual GPCR and non-GPCR mechanisms of blended and individual Taikong Blue lavender and Pingyin rose essential oils in neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders. Computers in biology and medicine 65.0 20 Models of neuroprotection in Parkinson's disease: Exploring cellular, molecular, and microenvironmental targets. Experimental neurology 78.0 21 Hyaluronic acid: emerging roles and biomaterial innovations in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease therapy. Frontiers in pharmacology 75.2 22 Molecular mechanisms underlying Parkinson's disease and role of phytochemicals, α-synuclein, sirtuins, and incretin mimetics in potential therapy. Frontiers in pharmacology 75.0 23 Lipid droplets in neurodegenerative diseases: pathological drivers and therapeutic vulnerabilities. Cell death discovery 82.0 24 Brain-gut-microbiota axis: a review on the bidirectional regulatory mechanisms between gut microbiota and brain and their disease interactions. Frontiers in microbiology 74.0 25 Long non-coding RNAs in neurodegenerative diseases - Molecular mechanisms, liquid biopsy biomarkers, and therapeutic targets: A review. Biomolecules & biomedicine 84.0 26 Neurosyphilis and Parkinsonism: Overlapping Pathophysiology and Emerging Therapeutic Insights. Current neurovascular research 76.0 27 Molecular biochemistry of soluble epoxide hydrolase in lipid mediator pathways and neuroinflammatory responses. The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology 82.0 28 Multifaceted role of CNPY2 beyond ER stress: Disease implications and therapeutic potential. Cell stress 83.3 29 Neuroprotective Role of Exercise-based Physiotherapy Combined with Pharmacological Agents in Parkinson's Disease. Central nervous system agents in medicinal chemistry 64.0 30 Distinct metabolomic and proteomic signatures in Parkinson's disease patients with REM sleep behavior disorder. Signal transduction and targeted therapy 84.0 31 HMGB1-mediated neuroinflammation: molecular mechanisms and emerging therapeutic approaches. Inflammopharmacology 78.0 32 Beyond acid-base dyshomeostasis: Dynamic instability of neuronal lysosomal pH as a pathogenic mechanism and therapeutic target in neurological diseases. Biochemical pharmacology 88.0
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