Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR)

Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR) JMIR Publications is a leading publisher advancing digital health research

05/12/2026

How does diabetes technology hold up in ultra-endurance sport?

A new study in the Journal of Medical Internet Research explores how people with type 1 diabetes use CGM, pumps, and hybrid closed-loop systems during extreme endurance events, balancing improved safety with increased mental and logistical load.

In extreme conditions, technology doesn’t just support performance, it reshapes what endurance actually means.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

05/08/2026

When people aren’t being heard, they build their own systems of care.

A new study of nearly 5,000 posts on women’s health subreddits shows something powerful: Reddit isn’t just a forum, it’s where validation, guidance, and shared survival strategies take shape.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

05/07/2026

Smart homes aren’t one-size-fits-all 🏠

Older adults have different lifestyles, needs, and comfort with tech, so why are we designing solutions like they’re all the same?

A study in JMIR Aging found 4 distinct lifestyle groups, each with unique priorities for smart home features.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

05/05/2026

We often call cognitive decline “normal aging.” But what if we’re just not measuring it correctly?

This paper in JMIR Neurotechnology from researchers highlights how wearable sleep data could unlock earlier, more personalized insights into women’s cognitive health.

Different biology. Different signals. Different endpoints.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

05/04/2026

What if rehab felt more like play than therapy?

A new JMIR Serious Games study tested a VR-based treadmill called Amy for children with chronic health conditions.

Children and parents reported high fun, comfort, and immersion, plus excellent usability scores overall.

Therapists were a bit more reserved, highlighting the need for clinical refinement.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

04/30/2026

Music may have a role in lung disease care.

A new randomized trial in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease found that a smartphone app combining rhythm-guided walking and singing improved exercise capacity, reduced breathlessness, and enhanced quality of life.

Small design shift, meaningful clinical impact.

Read the full Journal of Medical Internet Research article in the link in our bio.

04/28/2026

What happens when your habits are visible every day?

A 72-week study of 30,000 users found their alcohol intake steadily declined over time.

No program. Just continuous self-tracking.

The takeaway: Behavior change can emerge from awareness that builds quietly over time.

Read the full JMIR mHealth & uHealth study in the link in our bio.

04/28/2026

What if your diet plan actually worked for you? 🥗

A 2025 study in the Journal of Medical Internet Research combines food preferences, behavior change strategies, and machine learning to deliver personalized nutrition for cardiovascular disease prevention.

Using data from 61,000+ participants, researchers showed that simple food preference data can predict health risk nearly as well as traditional clinical models

Key takeaway: The future of nutrition isn’t restrictive, it’s personalized, practical, and built around real habits.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

04/27/2026

What if aging wasn’t just biological, but something you could experience differently? 🧠✨

A study in JMIR Formative Research used VR to let older adults embody their younger selves and revisit iconic moments from the past.

The result? Short-term improvements in wellbeing, cognition, and even physical performance.

Read the full study in the link in our bio.

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