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Patient Factors Associated With the Use of Online Portal Health Information in the Postpandemic Era: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey

Patient Factors Associated With the Use of Online Portal Health Information in the Postpandemic Era: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey

This publicly available survey study did not use any private identifiable information and thus did not constitute human subject research requiring institutional review board oversight, falling under exempt category 2 of our institutional Human Research Protections guidelines [10]. An administrative exempt self-determination was filed with our institutional review board (IRB#6379). We performed a cross-sectional analysis of data from the Health Information National Trends Survey 6 (HINTS 6) [11].

Ishana Maini, Kevin Gilotra, Gelareh Sadigh

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e60472

COVID-19–Related Racism and Mental Health Among Asian Americans: Integrative Review

COVID-19–Related Racism and Mental Health Among Asian Americans: Integrative Review

All 29 studies, with a wide range of sample sizes (from N=64 to N=7813), utilized cross-sectional survey designs conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic starting in March 2020, assessing possible associations between individual-level racism and mental health outcomes (Table 2 and Figure 1). All 29 articles received a score above 7 using the JBI Critical Appraisal tool.

Tania Von Visger, Amy Lyons, Yanjun Zhou, Kayla Wardlaw, Eunhee Park, Yu-Ping Chang

Asian Pac Isl Nurs J 2025;9:e63769

Public Awareness of and Attitudes Toward the Use of AI in Pathology Research and Practice: Mixed Methods Study

Public Awareness of and Attitudes Toward the Use of AI in Pathology Research and Practice: Mixed Methods Study

The survey was created and hosted on Qualtrics (Qualtrics International Inc), a web-based software to assist with survey management. The web-based survey consisted of 30 closed questions, 2 open questions, 2 attention checks, 2 screener validation questions (age and country of residence), and 1 CAPTCHA challenge (Multimedia Appendix 1). The survey was developed by the research team with input from a patient and public involvement panel and pilot-tested with individuals external to the research team (n=5).

Claire Lewis, Jenny Groarke, Lisa Graham-Wisener, Jacqueline James

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e59591

Engaging End Users to Inform the Design and Social Marketing Strategy for a Web-Based Sexually Transmitted Infection/Blood-Borne Virus (STI/BBV) Testing Service for Young People in Victoria, Australia: Qualitative Study

Engaging End Users to Inform the Design and Social Marketing Strategy for a Web-Based Sexually Transmitted Infection/Blood-Borne Virus (STI/BBV) Testing Service for Young People in Victoria, Australia: Qualitative Study

A self-administered web-based survey was completed by a select sample of respondents from the EOI. The demographic profile of EOI responses was screened as they were received, with approximately 15 individuals from each geographic location being invited to participate.

Ethan T Cardwell, Teralynn Ludwick, Shanton Chang, Olivia Walsh, Megan Lim, Rachel Podbury, David Evans, Christopher K Fairley, Fabian Y S Kong, Jane S Hocking

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e63822

Safe Listening Beliefs, Attitudes, and Practices Among Gamers and Esports Participants: International Web-Based Survey

Safe Listening Beliefs, Attitudes, and Practices Among Gamers and Esports Participants: International Web-Based Survey

Participation in the survey was completely voluntary, and no incentives or compensation were offered to participants. To participate in the survey, individuals had to have a good command of English, Spanish, French, or Chinese and be either video game players or involved in esports. No further specific eligibility criteria for access were specified, and participants could freely choose to participate.

Nicola Diviani, Shelly Chadha, Peter Mulas, Sara Rubinelli

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60476

Prevalence and Correlates of Clinically Elevated Depressive Symptoms in a Nationwide Sample of Transgender, Nonbinary, and Gender Diverse Young Adults in the United States: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Prevalence and Correlates of Clinically Elevated Depressive Symptoms in a Nationwide Sample of Transgender, Nonbinary, and Gender Diverse Young Adults in the United States: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

In August 2022, a cross-sectional survey was conducted with a nationwide US sample of young adults recruited and enrolled through Prolific, a survey platform that hosts a diverse panel of adults aged ≥18 years. The survey was conducted as part of Trans Health GUIDE, a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded project (U01 MH136558) aimed at designing and implementing strategies to address mental health disparities among TGD young adults.

Sari Reisner, Yuxin Liu, Regina Tham, Kaiden Kane, S Wilson Cole, Elizabeth R Boskey, Sabra L Katz-Wise, Alex S Keuroghlian, Rena Xu

Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e66630

Determinants of Telehealth Adoption Among Older Adults: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Determinants of Telehealth Adoption Among Older Adults: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

To ensure the questionnaire’s reliability, a pilot survey was carried out involving 10 older adults. This pretest, which involved contacting 10 older adults before conducting the web-based survey, was conducted to validate the instrument. On the basis of the feedback received, minor adjustments were made to the questionnaire to improve its effectiveness. This study focused on the factors influencing the intention to adopt telehealth among adults aged ≥60 years in Malaysia.

Siow-Hooi Tan, Yee-Yann Yap, Siow-Kian Tan, Chee-Kuan Wong

JMIR Aging 2025;8:e60936

Associations Among Online Health Information Seeking Behavior, Online Health Information Perception, and Health Service Utilization: Cross-Sectional Study

Associations Among Online Health Information Seeking Behavior, Online Health Information Perception, and Health Service Utilization: Cross-Sectional Study

An empirical analysis based on data from the United States Health Information Trends Survey revealed that OHIS has a positive, relatively large, and statistically significant effect on individual health care demand [21].

Hongmin Li, Dongxu Li, Min Zhai, Li Lin, ZhiHeng Cao

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e66683

Creation of Scientific Response Documents for Addressing Product Medical Information Inquiries: Mixed Method Approach Using Artificial Intelligence

Creation of Scientific Response Documents for Addressing Product Medical Information Inquiries: Mixed Method Approach Using Artificial Intelligence

A working group from phact MI developed a cross-sectional survey to assess the time and tediousness of various aspects of SRD creation. phact MI, a nonprofit consortium of medical information leaders from the pharmaceutical industry, conducted the survey using the survey tool Alchemer. The initial contact for the web-based open survey link was emailed to one contact at each of the 33 member companies in March 2023 (see Multimedia Appendix 1 for email wording).

Jerry Lau, Shivani Bisht, Robert Horton, Annamaria Crisan, John Jones, Sandeep Gantotti, Evelyn Hermes-DeSantis

JMIR AI 2025;4:e55277

Exploring the Views of Young People, Including Those With a History of Self-Harm, on the Use of Their Routinely Generated Data for Mental Health Research: Web-Based Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Exploring the Views of Young People, Including Those With a History of Self-Harm, on the Use of Their Routinely Generated Data for Mental Health Research: Web-Based Cross-Sectional Survey Study

This survey set out to engage respondents with and without a history of SH in order to gain insights into their views and knowledge of how different kinds of data are anonymized and used for research and to determine whether there are any differences of opinions between those 2 groups. We also aimed to explore differences between those who had contacted health services for SH and those who had not. This study was a web-based cross-sectional survey.

Dana Dekel, Amanda Marchant, Marcos Del Pozo Banos, Mohamed Mhereeg, Sze Chim Lee, Ann John

JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e60649