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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

The Safety of Telerehabilitation: Systematic Review

The Safety of Telerehabilitation: Systematic Review

Additionally, patients in rehabilitation often have physical or cognitive deficits (eg, a patient with hemiplegia and memory deficits from brain injury) that make them more vulnerable to risks compared to general telemedicine users, making the evaluation of telerehabilitation safety even more critical for preventing exacerbating existing conditions or for introducing new risks [15]. A scoping review by Yau et al [16] explored the association between telerehabilitation and adverse events.

Hila Shnitzer, Josh Chan, Thomas Yau, McKyla McIntyre, Angie Andreoli, Ailene Kua, Mark Bayley, Carl Froilan Leochico, Meiqi Guo, Sarah Munce

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2025;12:e68681

Exploring Clinicians’ and Patients’ Acceptance and Utilization of a Digital Solution to Support Individualized Care in Diabetes Specialist Outpatient Care (DigiDiaS): Qualitative Study

Exploring Clinicians’ and Patients’ Acceptance and Utilization of a Digital Solution to Support Individualized Care in Diabetes Specialist Outpatient Care (DigiDiaS): Qualitative Study

An observation guide (Multimedia Appendix 1) and interview guides (Multimedia Appendices 2 and 3) were developed based on informal observations that the first author conducted at the outpatient clinic between February and March 2023, as well as aspects of the Method for Assessment of Telemedicine framework [28]. The guides were reviewed in a reference group comprising a user representative, researchers, clinicians, and management from the outpatient clinic.

Maria Aadland Mollestad, Annesofie Lunde Jensen, Heidi Holmen, Tone Singstad, Eirik Årsand, Jacob Andreas Winther, Astrid Torbjørnsen

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e70301

Supporting Web-Based Teaching and Learning of Virtual Care Skills and Competencies: Development of an Evidence-Informed Framework

Supporting Web-Based Teaching and Learning of Virtual Care Skills and Competencies: Development of an Evidence-Informed Framework

Reference 19: Addressing the rapidly increasing need for telemedicine education for future physicians Reference 40: Telemedicine, COVID-19, and disparities: policy implicationstelemedicine

Lorelli Nowell, Sara Dolan, Sonja Johnston, Michele Jacobsen, Diane L Lorenzetti, Elizabeth Oddone Paolucci

JMIR Nursing 2025;8:e75868