JMIR Human Factors

(Re-)designing health care and making health care interventions and technologies usable, safe, and effective.

Editor-in-Chief:

Andre Kushniruk, BA, MSc, PhD, FACMI, School of Health Information Science, University of Victoria, Canada


Impact Factor 3.0 CiteScore 4.8

JMIR Human Factors (JHF, ISSN 2292-9495) is a multidisciplinary journal with contributions from design experts, medical researchers, engineers, and social scientists.

JMIR Human Factors focuses on understanding how the behaviour and thinking of humans can influence and shape the design of health care interventions and technologies, and how the design can be evaluated and improved to make health care interventions and technologies usable, safe, and effective. This includes usability studies and heuristic evaluations, studies concerning ergonomics and error prevention, design studies for medical devices and healthcare systems/workflows, enhancing teamwork through Human Factors based teamwork training, measuring non-technical skills in staff like leadership, communication, situational awareness and teamwork, and healthcare policies and procedures to reduce errors and increase safety.

JMIR Human Factors focuses aspires to lead health care towards a culture of "usability by design", as well as to a culture of testing, error-prevention and safety, by promoting and publishing reports rigorously evaluating the usability and human factors aspects in health care, as well as encouraging the development and debate on new methods in this emerging field. Possible contributions include usability studies and heuristic evaluations, studies concerning ergonomics and error prevention, design studies for medical devices and healthcare systems/workflows, enhancing teamwork through human factors-based teamwork training, measuring non-technical skills in staff like leadership, communication, situational awareness and teamwork, and healthcare policies and procedures to reduce errors and increase safety. Reviews, viewpoint papers and tutorials are as welcome as original research.

All articles are professionally copyedited and typeset.

JMIR Human Factors is indexed in National Library of Medicine (NLM)/MEDLINE, PubMed, PubMed Central, DOAJ, Scopus, Sherpa Romeo, PsycINFO, and the Web of Science (WoS)/ESCI.

JMIR Human Factors received a Journal Impact Factor of 3.0 according to the latest release of the Journal Citation Reports from Clarivate, 2025.

With a Citescore of 4.8 (2024), JMIR Human Factors is a Q2 journal in the field of Human Factors and Ergonomics, according to Scopus data.


Recent Articles

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Focus Groups and Qualitative Research for Human Factors Research

Health messages are integral to smoking cessation interventions. Common approaches to health message development include expert-crafted messages and audience-generated messages, which produce messages that can be monotonic, didactic, and limited in number. We introduce an alternative approach to health message development that relies on user-generated content available on open content platforms as a source of health messages.

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Design and Usability of Consumer Health Tech and Home Monitoring Devices

Although various applications (apps) have been developed to support health behaviors, they are mostly commercial, possibly limiting the number of users. The ME-BYO index was developed by Kanagawa Prefecture in 2019 to comprehensively and numerically measure and visualize an individual's current health status and future disease risk by quantifying data. The ME-BYO index is free of charge, so it can be made available to as many prefectural residents as possible for health promotion. Effective online strength training programs are being developed that, when combined with ME-BYO index measurements, will help with both exercise habits and health management.

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Design and Evaluation of Medical Education Materials

Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer (ChatGPT) excels in natural language tasks, but its performance in the Chinese National Medical Licensing Examination (NMLE) and Chinese medical education remains underexplored. Meanwhile, Chinese corpus-based large language models (LLMs) such as ERNIE Bot, Tongyi Qianwen, Doubao, and DeepSeek have emerged, yet their effectiveness in the NMLE awaits systematic evaluation.

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Psychological, Behavioral, Social, and/or Cultural Experiments and Interventions

Digital mental health platforms often consist of many different forms of self-care exercises. To our knowledge, whether the number of choices presented to the users affects their uptake and experiences and poses negative consequences (i.e., not choosing any exercises, choice dissatisfaction) for users, especially those experiencing anxiety and depressive symptoms or unpleasant state emotions have not been empirically investigated.

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Design and Usability of Medical Devices

Needleless access devices are essential for intravenous therapy but can be a source of contamination and catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs) if not disinfected properly. The BD PosiFlush SafeScrub (Becton, Dickinson and Company) is designed to support aseptic nontouch technique (ANTT) by incorporating a built-in reminder to “scrub-the-hub” before flushing. This feature can help improve compliance with disinfection practices and may reduce the risk of microbial contamination.

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Attitudes, Beliefs, and Health Behaviours in Human Factors Research

The use of artificial intelligence (AI) methods in palliative care research is increasing. Most AI palliative care research involves the use of routinely collected data from electronic health records; however, there are few data on the views of palliative care health care professionals on the role of AI in practice. Determining the opinions of palliative care health care professionals on the potential uses of AI in palliative care will be useful for policymakers and practitioners to determine and inform the meaningful use of AI in palliative care practice.

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User-Centered Design Case Studies

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) affects approximately 16 million Americans and often results in avoidable readmissions due, in part, to medication errors and lack of education. Tele-health interventions can support medication reconciliation and inhaler education following hospital discharge for patients with COPD.

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Psychological, Behavioral, Social, and/or Cultural Experiments and Interventions

In blended care, digital mental health interventions (DMHIs) integrate with face-to-face psychotherapy provided in person or via telehealth. To incorporate DMHIs into routine care for depression and anxiety, it is important to understand the needs and expectations of mental health professionals for blended DMHIs.

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Design and Usability of Medical Devices

Addressing the complex medical and psychosocial needs of older adults is increasingly difficult in resource-limited care settings. In this context, socially assistive robots (SARs) provide support and practical functions such as orientation and information delivery. Integrating large language models (LLMs) into SAR dialogue systems offers opportunities to improve interaction fluency and adaptability. Yet, in real-world use, acceptability also depends on minimizing both technical and conversational errors, ensuring successful user interactions, and adapting to individual user characteristics.

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Design, Usability, and Evaluation of Research Instruments, Scales, and Measures

A large amount of data is generated in healthcare facilities, yet it is rarely made available for secondary research use. The reasons are manifold. Most importantly, different stakeholders´ needs must be balanced. However, there are currently hardly any feasible solutions for this.

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Focus Groups and Qualitative Research for Human Factors Research

Remote patient monitoring (RPM) has the potential to reduce in-clinic visits and promote proactive and preventive care for patients with chronic disease in primary care. However, a decentralized approach of RPM in the primary healthcare (PHC) setting has not met stakeholders’ expectation regarding scalability. This study introduces a centralized virtual ward (CVW) led RPM, utilizing a multidisciplinary team approach to monitor patients with chronic diseases by clinicians that do not belong to the patients PHC centre.

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