Published on in Vol 7, No 1 (2022): Jan-Mar

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/27220, first published .
Use of Health Information Technology by Adults With Diabetes in the United States: Cross-sectional Analysis of National Health Interview Survey Data (2016-2018)

Use of Health Information Technology by Adults With Diabetes in the United States: Cross-sectional Analysis of National Health Interview Survey Data (2016-2018)

Use of Health Information Technology by Adults With Diabetes in the United States: Cross-sectional Analysis of National Health Interview Survey Data (2016-2018)

Journals

  1. He W, Cao L, Liu R, Wu Y, Zhang W. Factors associated with internet use and health information technology use among older people with multi-morbidity in the United States: findings from the National Health Interview Survey 2018. BMC Geriatrics 2022;22(1) View
  2. Heaton-Shrestha C, Hanson K, Quirke-McFarlane S, Delaney N, Vandrevala T, Bearne L. Exploring how members of the public access and use health research and information: a scoping review. BMC Public Health 2023;23(1) View
  3. Peimani M, Tanhapour M, Bandarian F, Nasli-Esfahani E, Ostovar A. Measuring electronic health literacy in the context of diabetes care: psychometric evaluation of a Persian version of the condition-specific eHealth literacy scale for diabetes. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making 2024;24(1) View
  4. Jung S, Park S, Lee J, Park Y, Shim S. Understanding patient perspectives on health-related searches on the internet: Insights from an online survey of Korean patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. Lupus 2025;34(1):39 View
  5. Frimpong A, Granados A, Chang T, Fu J, Moore S, Applebaum S, Adepoju B, Kaur M, Hari Krishnan V, Levi A, McCall T, Nwanyanwu K. Recommendations for Designing a Digital Health Tool for Blindness Prevention among High-Risk Diabetic Retinopathy Patients: A Focus Group Study with Adults with Diabetes (Preprint). JMIR Formative Research 2024 View