Journal of Medical Internet Research
The leading peer-reviewed journal for digital medicine and health and health care in the internet age.
Editor-in-Chief:
Gunther Eysenbach, MD, MPH, FACMI, Founding Editor and Publisher; Adjunct Professor, School of Health Information Science, University of Victoria, Canada Rachele Hendricks-Sturrup, DHSc, MSc, MA, FACTS, Lead Editor; Research Director of Real-World Evidence, Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy, Washington, DC
Impact Factor 8.2 More information about Impact Factor CiteScore 10.4 More information about CiteScore
Recent Articles


Digital health has the potential to mitigate health inequity for priority populations who are underserved or marginalized by the health system. However, there is a lack of practical guidance on how to include priority communities in the coproduction of digital health technologies, particularly across the entire lifecycle of innovation, including research, development, and evaluation.

The prevalence of multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs) is increasing globally, leading to complex health care needs and polypharmacy. Shared decision-making (SDM) is important for supporting patient-centered care, yet barriers such as limited consultation time, discontinuity of care, and communication challenges hinder implementation. Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to support SDM by providing personalized, data-driven recommendations, particularly for medication management in patients with MLTCs.

The use of web-based approaches to identify, recruit, enroll, survey, and interview health-related research participants has increased over time, with rapid acceleration since the COVID-19 pandemic. These approaches can make research more accessible to a broader population, but also increase the risk of fraudulent or imposter participants infiltrating research studies. While this threat has been discussed extensively in quantitative survey research, less has been reported in qualitative and mixed methods studies.

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with substantial risks of adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes. Contemporary management approaches for GDM exhibit insufficient implementation, resulting in suboptimal glycemic control and preventable perinatal complications. The rapid evolution of mobile health technologies offers potential to enhance GDM care, yet evidence from large real-world studies remains limited.

The successful design and implementation of artificial intelligence (AI)–driven solutions in health care requires early and continuous multidisciplinary and multiprofessional collaboration. However, diverse disciplinary educational backgrounds, varying languages, and cultural or geographic differences can lead to misunderstandings. To bridge this gap, a structured approach to AI requirements specification can facilitate a shared terminology and a deep mutual understanding among stakeholders, serving both as a guide for technological development and as a means of defining clear pathways for clinical implementation. While technical requirements are well-established in traditional technology development domains, this structured approach remains relatively underused within clinical and social science contexts. Consequently, valuable insights derived from participatory and stakeholder-driven approaches are often overlooked, limiting the relevance and trustworthiness of AI systems in health care settings.

Registries have long been a cornerstone of medical research and public health, providing systematically collected data on diseases, treatments, and health outcomes. However, in the era of digital health, we argue that the traditional model of stand-alone registries needs reconsideration, given the context of increasingly digitized and interoperable health data ecosystems. Unless registries evolve to embrace embedded, standards-based data services, operating across interoperable infrastructure, they will become obsolete while digitalization is reshaping how data can be collected, shared, and used. In this viewpoint, we recount how the present health data ecosystem came to be and what role registries have come to play therein. Following that, we show how recent regulatory initiatives such as the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement in the United States or the European Health Data Space Regulation signal a shift toward cross-network health information exchange, promoting patient-centric data integration within electronic health record systems. We further illustrate how electronic health records are consequently set to evolve into information hubs, acting as the primary gateway for individuals through which they may access and control their personal health data spread throughout increasingly connected health data ecosystems. This, in turn, might stimulate the creation of digital twins and continuous learning health systems in practice. Following this line of thought, we discuss the opportunities and challenges of interconnected health data ecosystems. Ultimately, we propose that next-generation registries need to be designed as dynamic, service-oriented software stacks for research, leveraging the common data infrastructures that are currently being established around the world. Given the points raised in this viewpoint, we invite health care professionals and researchers alike to equally rethink the role that registries should play within the globally emerging interconnected health data ecosystems and contribute their findings. References included in this viewpoint were identified through searches of PubMed and Google Scholar with various search terms and combinations thereof pertinent to the topics touched on, for example, “patient registry,” “clinical registry,” “digital twin,” “healthcare,” “clinical research,” “virtual twin,” “TEFCA,” or “EHDS.” Only papers in English were reviewed. The final reference list was generated on the basis of originality and relevance to the broad scope of topics covered in this viewpoint, aiming to present a balanced overview of topic-related findings and arguments.



Knee osteoarthritis is a heterogeneous condition characterized by chronic pain, stiffness, and fatigue that fluctuate rapidly over time. Traditional clinical assessments provide only static diagnoses of disease severity, failing to capture the dynamic, day-to-day symptom variability that impacts patient quality of life. While wearable technologies offer the potential for continuous, high-frequency monitoring, previous reviews have examined general technological interventions for knee osteoarthritis management, yet they lack a specific synthesis of technologies for symptom monitoring.
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