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Acceptability of Telehealth as the Default Modality for Multiple Sclerosis Care in Switzerland: Cross-Sectional Study

Acceptability of Telehealth as the Default Modality for Multiple Sclerosis Care in Switzerland: Cross-Sectional Study

Knowledge of and experience with telehealth was assessed using the following question: “Do you have knowledge of telemedicine offerings, and have you already gathered experiences with telemedicine?” Answer options were “neither knowledge of nor experience with telemedicine,” “knowledge of but no experience with telemedicine,” or “knowledge of and experience with telemedicine.”

Sintieh Nchinda Ngek Ekongefeyin, Paola Daniore, Vasileios Nittas, Stefania Iaquinto, Enriqueta Vallejo-Yagüe, Christian P Kamm, Pasquale Calabrese, Claudia Baum, Claudio Gobbi, Chiara Zecca, Andrew Chan, Milo Puhan, Viktor von Wyl

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2026;14:e84447


When Lived Experience Designs the Intervention

When Lived Experience Designs the Intervention

telemedicine

Trevor van Mierlo, JMIR Correspondent

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e91371


Virtual Reality–Based Program for Pediatric Patients With Amblyopia: Protocol for a Multicenter, Randomized, Open-Label, Two-Arm Study

Virtual Reality–Based Program for Pediatric Patients With Amblyopia: Protocol for a Multicenter, Randomized, Open-Label, Two-Arm Study

We included an in-headset stereopsis measure as it may provide a practical way to assess stereopsis under intervention conditions and enable monitoring between clinic visits, with potential utility for future clinical implementation and remote assessment in telemedicine. In conclusion, a VR app may overcome the limitations of conventional amblyopia training by offering a highly effective therapeutic alternative, thereby facilitating a paradigm shift in amblyopia management.

Ken Nagino, Yuichi Okumura, Masakazu Hirota, Saiko Matsumura, Tadashi Matsumoto, Takashi Negishi, Akie Midorikawa-Inomata, Makiko Ui, Takao Hayashi, Yuichi Hori, Shintaro Nakao, Takenori Inomata

JMIR Res Protoc 2026;15:e85194


Communication Strategies to Promote Patient Engagement in Telemedicine: Systematic Review

Communication Strategies to Promote Patient Engagement in Telemedicine: Systematic Review

A study analyzed telemedicine consultations in a university-based outpatient telemedicine program and found that the average savings per consultation were 278 miles, 245 minutes, and US $156 [15]. Suzuki and colleagues’ study [16] used principal component analysis and cluster analysis to identify countries in Asia and Africa with high potential for telemedicine development, such as Algeria, Egypt, Morocco, and Indonesia.

Yangna Hu, Cindy Sing Bik Ngai, Rui Jiang

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e85456


Gender Concordance and Patient Outcomes in Indian Telemedicine: Retrospective Cross-Sectional Quantitative Study of 286,000 Consultations

Gender Concordance and Patient Outcomes in Indian Telemedicine: Retrospective Cross-Sectional Quantitative Study of 286,000 Consultations

The COVID-19 crisis has triggered a revolutionary change in health care delivery and expedited the worldwide penetration of telemedicine as an acceptable mode of consultation [1]. In India, with sharp health care access inequalities, especially across rural and socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, telemedicine presented itself as a vital mechanism for overcoming geographic and resource-based barriers [2,3].

Nafisa Vaz, Vishalkumar Jani

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e78311


New Technologies and Digital Health Tools in Patients With Solid Tumors and Hematological Malignancies: Cross-Sectional Multicenter Survey Study

New Technologies and Digital Health Tools in Patients With Solid Tumors and Hematological Malignancies: Cross-Sectional Multicenter Survey Study

Using telemedicine to provide care for patients with hematological malignancies has proven to increase access to care and levels of patient satisfaction [1] compared with face-to-face care and leads to cost savings for health care systems. The potential of technology to facilitate the care of immunosuppressed patients, such as those with hematological cancer, has been demonstrated recently during the COVID-19 pandemic [2,3].

Alberto Lopez-Garcia, Carola Diaz-Aizpun, Beatriz Gallego-Diaz, Carolina Miranda-Castillo, Maria Yuste-Platero, Pilar Beltran-Alvarez, Cristina Carames-Sanchez, Jesus Garcia-Foncillas, Pilar Llamas-Sillero, Marta del Olmo-Rodriguez, Jorge Short-Apellaniz, Bernadette Pfang, Javier Arcos-Campillo, Raul Cordoba

JMIR Cancer 2026;12:e58823


Linking Patient-Reported and Clinician-Assessed Wound Status via Chatbot-Based Digital Surveillance for Wound Infection: Retrospective Observational Study

Linking Patient-Reported and Clinician-Assessed Wound Status via Chatbot-Based Digital Surveillance for Wound Infection: Retrospective Observational Study

Previous studies have shown that home-based telemedicine—encompassing remote telemonitoring and teleconsultation—can improve clinical outcomes, including reductions in rehospitalization [10] and mortality rates [9,11,12].

Yung-Cheng Su, Yu-Hsien Lin, Ming-Yuan Huang

JMIR Form Res 2026;10:e77685


Factors Influencing Continuance Intention for Online Consultations Among Survivors of Cancer: Grounded Theory Study

Factors Influencing Continuance Intention for Online Consultations Among Survivors of Cancer: Grounded Theory Study

The COVID-19 pandemic further accelerated the adoption of telemedicine and online health services, demonstrating their potential to supplement traditional care [14-16]. Survivors of cancer, often immunocompromised, benefitted from reduced exposure to hospital environments through digital consultations. As health systems adapt to postpandemic realities, online consultation is positioned as a permanent component of integrated cancer survivorship care.

Yutang Yao, Musi Zhang, Shanshan Peng, Zhuzhong Cheng, Yun Duan

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e84644


Attitudes Toward Video Consultations From the Perspective of Physicians and Psychotherapists in German Outpatient Care After the COVID-19 Pandemic: Survey Study

Attitudes Toward Video Consultations From the Perspective of Physicians and Psychotherapists in German Outpatient Care After the COVID-19 Pandemic: Survey Study

The utilization of telemedicine, in particular the implementation of video consultation (VC), has become increasingly popular since the onset of the global COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 [1-3]. In Germany, VC could be billed for certain diagnoses or check-ups in outpatient care since 2017. In 2019, the legislative initiative of the Digital Healthcare Act was implemented with the objective of accelerating the digital transformation of the nation’s health care infrastructure.

Lara Kleinschmidt, Juergen Wasem, Nikola Blase, Beatrice Nauendorf, Juliane Malsch, Matthias Brittner, Paul Brandenburg, André Aeustergerling, Theresa Hüer

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e73757


Telebehavioral Health, In-Person, and Hybrid Modalities of Treatment Delivery Among US Service Members: Longitudinal Observational Study

Telebehavioral Health, In-Person, and Hybrid Modalities of Treatment Delivery Among US Service Members: Longitudinal Observational Study

Telehealth is broadly defined by the American Telemedicine Association as a “mode of delivering healthcare services through the use of telecommunications technologies ...by a healthcare practitioner to a patient at a different physical location than the healthcare practitioner” [1], and the term has been used interchangeably with telemedicine, teletherapy, mobile health, e Health, and digital health delivery across the literature.

Kristen H Walter, Lisa H Glassman, Jordan A Levine, Hee-Jin Jun, James F Bonkowski, Samuel Y Chung, Emily A Schmied

JMIR Ment Health 2026;13:e83809