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Examining a Telemedicine-Based Virtual Reality Clinic in Treating Adults With Specific Phobia: Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Efficacy Trial

Examining a Telemedicine-Based Virtual Reality Clinic in Treating Adults With Specific Phobia: Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Efficacy Trial

After obtaining informed consent, supported by the REDCap e-Consent Framework feature, participants will be automatically directed to baseline questionnaire surveys, for which REDCap auto-calculates the scores. Following completion of the baseline assessment, the participant will be randomized to their respective treatment conduction using the Randomization Module.

Kaitlyn R Schuler, Triton Ong, Brandon M Welch, Jason G Craggs, Brian E Bunnell

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e65770

Mental Health Providers’ Challenges and Solutions in Prescribing Over Telemedicine: Content Analysis of Semistructured Interviews

Mental Health Providers’ Challenges and Solutions in Prescribing Over Telemedicine: Content Analysis of Semistructured Interviews

Of the 85 (36.3%) out of the 234 total code instances that describe barriers (14 providers), 37 (44%) of the 85 instances specifically mentioned that the e-prescription platform and the pharmacies caused challenges in prescribing medicines or picking up medicines (13 providers). There were 17 (20%) instances of providers describing difficulties with the actual e-prescription platform they use.

Julia Ivanova, Mollie R Cummins, Hiral Soni, Triton Ong, Brian E Bunnell, Esteban López, Brandon M Welch

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e65419

Expanding a Health Technology Solution to Address Therapist Challenges in Implementing Homework With Adult Clients: Mixed Methods Study

Expanding a Health Technology Solution to Address Therapist Challenges in Implementing Homework With Adult Clients: Mixed Methods Study

Other suggestions mentioned by several participants included adding more options for registration (ie, self-registration and customized communication preferences, including more client identifiers and a feature for group, couple, and family registration; 8/63, 13% of references) and adding an e-consent form (5/63, 8% of references). One participant emphasized the following: Share-ability! Where can I share the information? Is it with the client? Is it with their parent? Is it with a family member?

Brian E Bunnell, Kaitlyn R Schuler, Julia Ivanova, Lea Flynn, Janelle F Barrera, Jasmine Niazi, Dylan Turner, Brandon M Welch

JMIR Hum Factors 2024;11:e56567

Consensus Guidelines for Teledermatology: Scoping Review

Consensus Guidelines for Teledermatology: Scoping Review

The two primary sources of general teledermatology guidance discovered in this review were as follows: (1) the University of Queensland’s Centre for Online Health and the Australasian College of Dermatologists E-Health Committee (UQ-ACD) [18-20], and (2) the American Telemedicine Association (ATA) [25,29]. Most of the UQ-ACD and ATA guidance was issued before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mollie R Cummins, Triton Ong, Julia Ivanova, Janelle F Barrera, Hattie Wilczewski, Hiral Soni, Brandon M Welch, Brian E Bunnell

JMIR Dermatol 2023;6:e46121

Quantifying the Impact of COVID-19 on Telemedicine Utilization: Retrospective Observational Study

Quantifying the Impact of COVID-19 on Telemedicine Utilization: Retrospective Observational Study

Care delivery using telemedicine, however, is not without behind-the-scenes complexities, including coordination across EHRs, patient portals, e-prescribing platforms, other scheduling- or monitoring-related applications; access to secure, effective audiovisual communication software; and acquisition of sufficient computer hardware and high-speed internet.

Emily Louise Vogt, Brandon M Welch, Brian E Bunnell, Janelle F Barrera, Samantha R Paige, Marisa Owens, Patricia Coffey, Nancy Diazgranados, David Goldman

Interact J Med Res 2022;11(1):e29880