Search Results (1 to 10 of 2436 Results)
Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS
Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 932 Journal of Medical Internet Research
- 255 JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
- 241 JMIR mHealth and uHealth
- 227 JMIR Medical Informatics
- 184 JMIR Formative Research
- 149 JMIR Research Protocols
- 80 JMIR Serious Games
- 45 Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
- 38 JMIR Mental Health
- 36 JMIR Medical Education
- 34 JMIR Human Factors
- 32 Interactive Journal of Medical Research
- 32 JMIR Aging
- 32 JMIR Cancer
- 17 JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
- 14 JMIR AI
- 13 JMIR Diabetes
- 12 Iproceedings
- 12 JMIR Infodemiology
- 10 JMIR Dermatology
- 8 JMIR Nursing
- 7 JMIR Cardio
- 7 JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
- 6 JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology
- 4 JMIR Perioperative Medicine
- 4 JMIRx Med
- 2 JMIR Biomedical Engineering
- 2 Journal of Participatory Medicine
- 1 Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal
- 0 Medicine 2.0
- 0 iProceedings
- 0 JMIR Preprints
- 0 JMIR Challenges
- 0 JMIR Data
- 0 JMIRx Bio
- 0 Transfer Hub (manuscript eXchange)
- 0 JMIR Neurotechnology
- 0 JMIR XR and Spatial Computing (JMXR)
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section

Yu et al [11] established a method for self-monitoring of diet and vital signs, which showed significant improvements in healthy habit formation and disease prevention.
Despite the efficacy of self-monitoring of dietary behaviors, participant adherence tends to wane over time due to the labor-intensive nature of the approach and the absence of an efficient passive recording method [12,13].
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e65431
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section

According to Lin et al [8], there was a negative association between COVID-19 vaccine confidence and a higher misinformation belief level across 14 countries.
Social norms are characterized as beliefs that are collectively shared regarding what is considered typical or concerning what is expected behavior within a group, which guide individuals’ behaviors.
JMIR Public Health Surveill 2025;11:e66872
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section