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Effective Recruitment or Bot Attack? The Challenge of Internet-Based Research Surveys and Recommendations to Reduce Risk and Improve Robustness

Effective Recruitment or Bot Attack? The Challenge of Internet-Based Research Surveys and Recommendations to Reduce Risk and Improve Robustness

In both case studies, new surveys were created and circulated with additional security measures in place, including location screening features, CAPTCHA coding, the use of fraud scores algorithms, and referral restrictions if recruitment occurs through social media (further strategies are discussed in the section “Ways to counteract a bot attack”).

Liesje Donkin, Nathan Henry, Amy Kercher, Mangor Pedersen, Holly Wilson, Amy Hai Yan Chan

Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e60548

Oncology Provider and Patient Perspectives on a Cardiovascular Health Assessment Tool Used During Posttreatment Survivorship Care in Community Oncology (Results from WF-1804CD): Mixed Methods Observational Study

Oncology Provider and Patient Perspectives on a Cardiovascular Health Assessment Tool Used During Posttreatment Survivorship Care in Community Oncology (Results from WF-1804CD): Mixed Methods Observational Study

Providers completed 2 surveys: one immediately after participating in the initial AH-HA training (posttraining survey) before participant enrollment and one after 30 patients were enrolled at the practice (postenrollment survey). Provider surveys assessed the acceptability of the training and AH-HA tool, and preferences for when and how often to use the AH-HA tool in the cancer treatment trajectory.

Chandylen L Nightingale, Emily V Dressler, Maura Kepper, Heidi D Klepin, Simon Craddock Lee, Sydney Smith, Aylin Aguilar, Kimberly D Wiseman, Stephanie J Sohl, Brian J Wells, Joseph A DeMari, Alyssa Throckmorton, Lindsey W Kulbacki, Jenny Hanna, Randi E Foraker, Kathryn E Weaver

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e65152

Speech and Language Therapists’ Perspectives of Virtual Reality as a Clinical Tool for Autism: Cross-Sectional Survey

Speech and Language Therapists’ Perspectives of Virtual Reality as a Clinical Tool for Autism: Cross-Sectional Survey

A web-based questionnaire, reported in accordance with the CHERRIES (Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys) checklist [22], was created to gather qualitative and quantitative data exploring speech and language therapists’ knowledge and attitudes toward VR as a tool for autism. This was a cross-sectional study, with data representing a snapshot of speech and language therapists’ perspectives at a single point in time.

Jodie Mills, Orla Duffy

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2025;12:e63235

Using an Interactive Voice Response Survey to Assess Patient Satisfaction in Ethiopia: Development and Feasibility Study

Using an Interactive Voice Response Survey to Assess Patient Satisfaction in Ethiopia: Development and Feasibility Study

Patient satisfaction surveys have gained increasing attention as an essential source of information for quality improvement [1]. In high-income countries, these surveys are often paper-based and mailed to patients or delivered by email and completed on the web [2]. However, in low-income settings, these delivery methods can be problematic. Paper- and web-based surveys also assume that all recipients can read and write.

Dessalegn Shamebo, Anagaw Derseh Mebratie, Catherine Arsenault

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e67452

Electronic Health Record Use Patterns Among Well-Being Survey Responders and Nonresponders: Longitudinal Observational Study

Electronic Health Record Use Patterns Among Well-Being Survey Responders and Nonresponders: Longitudinal Observational Study

Symptoms of burnout among physicians have risen sharply in recent years [1], but burnout symptoms and other markers of physician well-being are currently identified by voluntary responses to surveys [2]. Such intermittent surveys often have low response rates and carry the risk of response bias, as physicians with burnout or other symptoms of poor well-being may have systematically different likelihood of responding [3].

Daniel Tawfik, Tait D Shanafelt, Mohsen Bayati, Jochen Profit

JMIR Med Inform 2025;13:e64722

Parental Information-Use Strategies in a Digital Parenting Environment and Their Associations With Parental Social Support and Self-Efficacy: Cross-Sectional Study

Parental Information-Use Strategies in a Digital Parenting Environment and Their Associations With Parental Social Support and Self-Efficacy: Cross-Sectional Study

To ensure the quality and transparency of the research, the Checklist for Reporting of Survey Studies (CROSS) developed by Sharma et al [22] and the CHERRIES (Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys) developed by Eysenbach [23] were used. This paper reports a portion of the data from a survey titled “Information Behavior on Social Networking Services Among Parents of Infants and Toddlers.”

Ryuta Onishi

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e58757

Investigating Older Adults’ Perceptions of AI Tools for Medication Decisions: Vignette-Based Experimental Survey

Investigating Older Adults’ Perceptions of AI Tools for Medication Decisions: Vignette-Based Experimental Survey

disease by race, ethnicity, and 10-year disease risk in the US: national health and nutrition examination surveys Reference 32: Improving the quality of web surveys: the checklist for reporting results of internet e-surveyssurveys

Sarah E Vordenberg, Julianna Nichols, Vincent D Marshall, Kristie Rebecca Weir, Michael P Dorsch

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e60794