Published on in Vol 10 (2023)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/36072, first published .
Trust and Uncertainty in the Implementation of a Pilot Remote Blood Pressure Monitoring Program in Primary Care: Qualitative Study of Patient and Health Care Professional Views

Trust and Uncertainty in the Implementation of a Pilot Remote Blood Pressure Monitoring Program in Primary Care: Qualitative Study of Patient and Health Care Professional Views

Trust and Uncertainty in the Implementation of a Pilot Remote Blood Pressure Monitoring Program in Primary Care: Qualitative Study of Patient and Health Care Professional Views

Journals

  1. Teo S, Chew E, Ng D, Tang W, Koh G, Teo V. Implementation and use of technology-enabled blood pressure monitoring and teleconsultation in Singapore’s primary care: a qualitative evaluation using the socio-technical systems approach. BMC Primary Care 2023;24(1) View
  2. Idris H, Nugraheni W, Rachmawati T, Kusnali A, Yulianti A, Purwatiningsih Y, Nuraini S, Susianti N, Faisal D, Arifin H, Maharani A. How Is Telehealth Currently Being Utilized to Help in Hypertension Management within Primary Healthcare Settings? A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2024;21(1):90 View
  3. Bernabe M, Ebardo R. Barriers Leading to the Discontinuance of Telemedicine among Healthcare Providers: A Systematic Review. Data and Metadata 2025;4:440 View
  4. Ali S, Osman Mohamed A, Osman H, Abdelrahman Ibrahim M, Hassan Mukhtar M, Ahmed Mohamed F, Alhajri A. The Role of Telemedicine in Improving Hypertension Management Outcomes: A Systematic Review. Cureus 2024 View