e.g. mhealth
Search Results (1 to 10 of 26 Results)
Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS
Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 9 Journal of Medical Internet Research
- 6 JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
- 4 JMIRx Med
- 3 JMIR Research Protocols
- 1 JMIR Cardio
- 1 JMIR Dermatology
- 1 JMIR Formative Research
- 1 JMIR mHealth and uHealth
- 0 Medicine 2.0
- 0 Interactive Journal of Medical Research
- 0 iProceedings
- 0 JMIR Human Factors
- 0 JMIR Medical Informatics
- 0 JMIR Serious Games
- 0 JMIR Mental Health
- 0 JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
- 0 JMIR Preprints
- 0 JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology
- 0 JMIR Medical Education
- 0 JMIR Cancer
- 0 JMIR Challenges
- 0 JMIR Diabetes
- 0 JMIR Biomedical Engineering
- 0 JMIR Data
- 0 Journal of Participatory Medicine
- 0 JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
- 0 JMIR Aging
- 0 JMIR Perioperative Medicine
- 0 JMIR Nursing
- 0 JMIRx Bio
- 0 JMIR Infodemiology
- 0 Transfer Hub (manuscript eXchange)
- 0 JMIR AI
- 0 JMIR Neurotechnology
- 0 Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal
- 0 Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
- 0 JMIR XR and Spatial Computing (JMXR)

Aligned with World Health Organization’s Universal Health Coverage (all people have access to the full range of quality health services they need, when, and where they need them), this evidence-based research on well-being and psychosocial outcomes can inform policy makers consider reducing health inequality and improving social capital and cohesion, while expanding the home broadband connection.
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e59023
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS

Use of ChatGPT to Explore Gender and Geographic Disparities in Scientific Peer Review
inequality
J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e57667
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS

Reference 33: Quantifying digital health inequality across a national healthcare systeminequality
J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e56320
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS

inequalityInequality in Mortality and Cardiovascular Risk Among Young, Low-Income, Self-Employed Workers: Nationwide
JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e48047
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section

The causes of inequality in health are often assigned to “social determinants” (education, income, and gender) although these are correlations rather than causations; being a poor, low-educated man does not determine one’s health or access to health, even if more low educated men have poor health.
JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e56197
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section

However, socioeconomic disparities remain a major cause of inequality, affecting participation in cancer screening services in Korea [43]. Therefore, to increase cancer survival rates among socioeconomically vulnerable patients, interventions in basic health care and cancer screening programs should be expanded, considering the characteristics of each cancer type. This can help to increase early cancer detection rates and provide appropriate treatment at the right time.
Our study has some limitations.
JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e55011
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section