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 3.9 More information about Impact Factor CiteScore 5.6 More information about CiteScore
Recent Articles

Posttraumatic stress, along with comorbid mental health challenges and hazardous alcohol use, disproportionately affects people living with HIV. The drivers of these stressors are both intraindividual, rooted in early life adversity and firsthand violence exposures, and contextual, often place-based. Imparting effective coping skills and distinguishing between changeable and unchangeable stressors can improve stress management in the short term, with cascading effects on key HIV continuum of care end points, such as antiretroviral therapy adherence. However, problem- and emotion-based coping skills, delivered via traditional linear in-person group modalities, may falter in the moment. To address this, we adapted the evidence-based Living in the Face of Trauma intervention into an iOS- and Android-native app, featuring daily diary–triggered coping skills recommendations, self-guided Living in the Face of Trauma psychoeducational sessions, and a customizable geofencing function.

Anxiety and depressive disorders remain highly prevalent and insufficiently treated, with many individuals experiencing persistent or untreated symptoms, limited access to evidence-based care, or insufficient support between clinical encounters. Adults with disabilities represent a particularly underserved subpopulation, often facing compounded barriers to mental health care and higher rates of anxiety and depression. Digital therapeutics offer a scalable opportunity to address these gaps by extending structured, evidence-based interventions beyond traditional care settings.

The incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) continues to increase, and the lack of individualized therapy strategies hinders patient engagement with and commitment to a healthy lifestyle. The PROTEIN project aimed to facilitate users in choosing healthy living, thereby improving their metabolism and T2D management.


Approach bias modification (ApBM) aims to target maladaptive approach tendencies toward substance-related cues and has increasingly been examined as an adjunctive intervention for substance use disorders, including nicotine use. However, although participants’ subjective experiences of ApBM are likely to influence both its effectiveness and successful implementation, they have rarely been systematically investigated.

Population aging is associated with a rising number of people living with cognitive impairment (CI), straining traditional caregiving systems. More than 55 million individuals live with CI worldwide, while care delivery faces severe capacity constraints. China’s rapid aging provides a context for examining the acceptance and use of digital assistive technologies (DATs) in CI care. Although DATs offer the potential to address this care gap, systematic evidence on acceptance and use remains limited.

Artificial intelligence–based skin cancer screening apps (AISCSAs) offer diagnostic potential but face limited adoption. App store cues, such as ratings, may influence acceptance; yet, little is known about how users cognitively process app store information in high-stakes health contexts. To address this gap, eye-tracking was used to measure visual attention while participants evaluated a mock AISCSA app store listing.


Digital therapeutics (DTx) are evidence-based software interventions with the potential to treat health conditions. However, uptake remains limited by low public awareness and overly complex patient education materials that exceed recommended readability levels. Large language models (LLMs) may simplify such content; however, their effects on users’ understanding have not been empirically demonstrated.

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