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The Evolution of Medical Student Competencies and Attitudes in Digital Health Between 2016 and 2022: Comparative Cross-Sectional Study

The Evolution of Medical Student Competencies and Attitudes in Digital Health Between 2016 and 2022: Comparative Cross-Sectional Study

Reference 26: Attitude, awareness, and knowledge of telemedicine among medical students: a systematic Reference 27: Perception of Saudi undergraduate medical students on telemedicine training and its implementation Reference 28: eHealth and telemedicine: practices and beliefs among healthcare professionals and medicaltelemedicine

Paula Veikkolainen, Timo Tuovinen, Petri Kulmala, Erika Jarva, Jonna Juntunen, Anna-Maria Tuomikoski, Merja Männistö, Teemu Pihlajasalo, Jarmo Reponen

JMIR Med Educ 2025;11:e67423

Validation and Acceptability of the Mobile App Version of the Control of Allergic Rhinitis and Asthma Test for Children (CARATKids): Cross-Sectional Study

Validation and Acceptability of the Mobile App Version of the Control of Allergic Rhinitis and Asthma Test for Children (CARATKids): Cross-Sectional Study

With strong psychometric properties and high acceptability among children and caregivers, e CARATKids has the potential to enhance telemedicine strategies and facilitate remote pediatric monitoring. Its integration into m Health platforms could further optimize disease management and contribute to improving health outcomes in pediatric asthma and allergic rhinitis care.

Dulce Abreu da Mata, Inês Pais-Cunha, Sandra Catarina Ferraz, Daniela da Rocha Couto, Catarina Ferraz, Sónia Silva, José Carlos Valente, Pedro Vieira-Marques, João A Fonseca, Inês Azevedo, Cristina Jácome

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e73531

Remote Digital Health Interventions to Support the Physical, Functional, or Psychological Rehabilitation of Adult Patients With Major Traumatic Injuries: Protocol for a Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials

Remote Digital Health Interventions to Support the Physical, Functional, or Psychological Rehabilitation of Adult Patients With Major Traumatic Injuries: Protocol for a Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials

Several definitions exist for DH [5], often with different terms used interchangeably, including DH care [1,4], telehealth [1,5,8], telemedicine [6,8-10], or telecare [11]. However, DH is the umbrella term that encompasses all other terms [12-14]. DH tools can be delivered anywhere.

Hiyam Al-Jabr, Emma Salt, John Stephenson, Esra Hamdan, Toby Helliwell

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e67675

Costs and Outcomes of a Therapist-Guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Multicenter Observational Study

Costs and Outcomes of a Therapist-Guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Multicenter Observational Study

Among the several proposed frameworks, the Model for Assessment of Telemedicine Applications (MAST) offers a multidisciplinary assessment spanning from application characteristics and patient perspectives to economic and organizational aspects that extend beyond the traditional cost-effectiveness approach within health technology assessment [31].

Zareen Abbas Khan, Jørn Heggelund, Stian Lydersen, Kristian Kidholm, Henrik Pedersen, Imre Janszky, Tine Nordgreen, Vidar Halsteinli

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e73067

Developing an Evaluation Index System for Service Capability of Internet Hospitals in China: Mixed Methods Study

Developing an Evaluation Index System for Service Capability of Internet Hospitals in China: Mixed Methods Study

Internet hospitals are medical platforms that combine online and offline access to medical institutions to directly provide patients with various online and telemedicine services, including online consultation, online diagnosis, follow-up treatment, and health management [3].

Mingge Xia, Qi Liu, Li Ma, Jingyu Wen, Yan Xue, Hao Hu, Min Li, Hong Wei

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e72931

Facilitated Telemedicine as a Patient-Centered, Sociotechnical Intervention to Integrate Hepatitis C Treatment Into Opioid Treatment Programs and Overcome the Digital Divide Among Underserved Populations: Qualitative Study

Facilitated Telemedicine as a Patient-Centered, Sociotechnical Intervention to Integrate Hepatitis C Treatment Into Opioid Treatment Programs and Overcome the Digital Divide Among Underserved Populations: Qualitative Study

The objective of the workshop was to disseminate successful approaches that overcame facilitated telemedicine implementation challenges. We also desired to inform workshop participants how facilitated telemedicine promotes patient-centered health care delivery for HCV treatment integrated into OTPs. We highlighted facilitated telemedicine implementation considerations that addressed the digital divide.

Andrew H Talal, Arpan Dharia, Marianthi Markatou, Lawrence S Brown Jr, Kenneth E Bossert, Zakiya Grubbs, Raktim Mukhopadhyay, Boatemaa Ntiri-Reid, Elisabeth J Houtsmuller

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2025;11:e68854

Examining the Influence of Demographic and Socioeconomic Factors on Disparities in Health Care App Usage: Protocol for a Systematic Scoping Review

Examining the Influence of Demographic and Socioeconomic Factors on Disparities in Health Care App Usage: Protocol for a Systematic Scoping Review

Subgroup patterns will be explored descriptively across predefined categories to identify meaningful variations in usage trends, including (1) app type (telemedicine, medication reminders, fitness, chronic disease management), (2) age group (18-34, 35-49, 50-64, 65+ years old), (3) gender (male, female, other where reported), (4) education level (less than high school, high school graduate, college degree, postgraduate), and (5) income level (US $75,000).

Fahad Aljuaid, Emily Reed, Sara Imanpour, Daniel J Mallinson

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e63596

Mental Health Care Guidelines for Telemedicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Scoping Review

Mental Health Care Guidelines for Telemedicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Scoping Review

Telemedicine was quickly and widely adopted in early 2020 to curb the spread of the SARS-Co V-2 virus and to increase access to health care [1]. As health care professionals used telemedicine to limit the spread of COVID-19 in hospitals, clinics, and private practices, its role extended beyond outbreak control and became a widely accepted means of delivering care [2].

Julia Ivanova, Triton Ong, Hattie Wilczewski, Mollie Cummins, Hiral Soni, Janelle Barrera, Brandon Welch, Brian Bunnell

JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e56534