Search Results (1 to 10 of 199 Results)
Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS
Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 54 Journal of Medical Internet Research
- 30 JMIR Research Protocols
- 23 JMIR mHealth and uHealth
- 17 JMIR Formative Research
- 14 JMIR Serious Games
- 13 Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
- 9 JMIR Medical Informatics
- 7 JMIR Human Factors
- 7 JMIR Mental Health
- 6 JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
- 2 Interactive Journal of Medical Research
- 2 JMIR AI
- 2 JMIR Cancer
- 2 JMIR Cardio
- 2 JMIR Diabetes
- 2 JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
- 2 JMIRx Med
- 1 Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal
- 1 JMIR Aging
- 1 JMIR Dermatology
- 1 JMIR Medical Education
- 1 JMIR Perioperative Medicine
- 0 Medicine 2.0
- 0 iProceedings
- 0 JMIR Preprints
- 0 JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology
- 0 JMIR Challenges
- 0 JMIR Biomedical Engineering
- 0 JMIR Data
- 0 Journal of Participatory Medicine
- 0 JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
- 0 JMIR Nursing
- 0 JMIRx Bio
- 0 JMIR Infodemiology
- 0 Transfer Hub (manuscript eXchange)
- 0 JMIR Neurotechnology
- 0 JMIR XR and Spatial Computing (JMXR)
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
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
Go back to the top of the page Skip and go to footer section

Emergency department (ED) time intervals.
a BF: Bayes factor.
b Alternative hypothesis: phase 1>phase 2; prior probability: Cauchy, scale 1.0.
c P value calculated with the Mann-Whitney U test.
When the ED diagnosis was confirmed during the hospital stay, the time to diagnosis in the ED was significantly shorter in phase 2 (25, IQR 15‐60 min vs 43, IQR 10-70 min; BF=5.0), a difference of 18 minutes that is only moderately significant in the Bayesian analysis but clinically highly relevant.
JMIRx Med 2025;6:e53276
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS

Little’s Missing-completely-at-random test was used to ensure that missing data due to dropouts and missing values were valid for our analyses [36] Moreover, the groups were tested for comparability regarding sociodemographic and medical third variables by means of t tests, Mann-Whitney U tests and chi-square tests. If differences were significant, the respective variables were analyzed for associations with the outcome variables and included as covariates.
J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e56230
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

AI in Dental Radiology—Improving the Efficiency of Reporting With ChatGPT: Comparative Study
J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e60684
Download Citation: END BibTex RIS