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JMIR Medical Informatics

Clinical informatics, decision support for health professionals, electronic health records, and eHealth infrastructures.

Editor-in-Chief:

Arriel Benis, PhD, FIAHSI, Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Digital Medical Technologies, Holon Institute of Technology (HIT), Israel


Impact Factor 3.8 More information about Impact Factor CiteScore 7.7 More information about CiteScore

JMIR Medical Informatics (JMI, ISSN 2291-9694, Journal Impact Factor 3.8) (Editor-in-chief: Arriel Benis, PhD, FIAHSI) is an open-access journal that focuses on the challenges and impacts of clinical informatics, digitalization of care processes, clinical and health data pipelines from acquisition to reuse, including semantics, natural language processing, natural interactions, meaningful analytics and decision support, electronic health records, infrastructures, implementation, and evaluation (see Focus and Scope).

JMIR Medical Informatics adheres to rigorous quality standards, involving a rapid and thorough peer-review process, professional copyediting, and professional production of PDF, XHTML, and XML proofs.

The journal is indexed in MEDLINEPubMedPubMed CentralDOAJ, Scopus, and the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE)

JMIR Medical Informatics received a Journal Impact Factor of 3.8 (Source:Journal Citation Reports 2025 from Clarivate).

JMIR Medical Informatics received a Scopus CiteScore of 7.7 (2024), placing it in the 79th percentile (#32 of 153) as a Q1 journal in the field of Health Informatics.

Recent Articles

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Viewpoints on and Experiences with Digital Technologies in Health

The rapid integration of large language models into electronic medical record systems introduces a critical theoretical vulnerability. Drawing on foundational computer science proofs of “model collapse,” this viewpoint introduces the concept of “Clinical Model Autophagy”—a systemic degradation of diagnostic integrity that occurs when clinical artificial intelligence (AI) models are recursively trained on unverified, AI-generated synthetic data. As these recursive models may progressively regress toward statistical means, they undergo “Interpretative Drift,” a clinically concerning phenomenon where rare pathological variances are systematically erased and complex diseases are homogenized into benign averages. To prevent the irreversible contamination of health care data ecosystems, the author urgently proposes the Data Purity Standard (DPS). The DPS mandates the cryptographic watermarking of all AI-assisted clinical entries for provenance tracking, alongside the establishment of “Human Vaults.” These physically segregated repositories of physician-verified heritage data will serve as immutable biological anchors to safely guide future AI training, ensuring the long-term reliability of digital health infrastructure.

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Digital Health Meta-Research and Bibliographic Studies

Fractional carbon dioxide (CO₂) laser resurfacing is widely used for the treatment of scars and photoaging. In recent years, public interest in minimally invasive esthetic procedures has grown, influenced by social media exposure and changing beauty norms. However, data quantifying population-level attention to CO₂ laser treatments in Germany are limited.

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Decision Support for Health Professionals

Digital twins (DTs) offer a paradigm for health care by enabling data-driven, simulation-capable representations of individual health trajectories. However, DT development remains limited by the scarcity of standardized, temporally structured, and multidomain data suitable for modeling chronic disease progression. Most existing DT studies rely on narrowly scoped or proprietary datasets, restricting generalizability. Public health datasets, such as the Midlife in the United States study, provide rich biopsychosocial information but are underused due to structural complexity and lack of semantic integration frameworks.

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Machine Learning

Predicting mortality among people living with HIV enables clinicians to implement timely, targeted, and preventive interventions at the start of antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, prognostic models must rely strictly on baseline predictors to avoid look-ahead bias and ensure scientific validity. This study evaluates machine-learning (ML) algorithms for baseline mortality prediction using routine electronic medical record data.

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Machine Learning

Feature selection is the process of identifying the most informative and relevant features from a larger set of candidate features in machine learning (ML) models. The Boruta algorithm and the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) are 2 widely used methods.

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Secondary Use of Clinical Data for Research and Surveillance

The occurrence of sepsis in patients with heart failure (HF) has received less attention in research; yet, it poses a significant clinical challenge due to the complex interplay between chronic cardiac dysfunction and acute systemic inflammation. The stress hyperglycemia ratio (SHR) has emerged as an independent risk factor in various cardiovascular diseases and patients with sepsis, but its role in predicting sepsis risk in patients with HF remains underexplored.

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Ambient AI Scribes and AI-Driven Documentation Technologies

Physicians routinely document specifics of patient encounters in clinic visit notes, a critical but potentially time-consuming task. Ambient listening artificial intelligence (AI) technology is being integrated into clinical workflows to reduce documentation burden by creating draft visit notes. While this technology is promising, it is not perfect, and the potential for patient harm needs to be understood and mitigated. We developed and piloted an efficient, standardized approach to evaluating AI-generated notes for safety concerns in ambulatory care visits.

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Methods and Instruments in Medical Informatics

Preventing adverse drug reactions requires accurate monitoring of drug exposure throughout patient care. Conventional metrics, measured at admission or discharge, fail to capture the dynamic and cumulative nature of drug burden during hospitalization. Improving exposure assessment is essential to support clinical decision-making and medication safety. Clinical data warehouses (CDWs), which integrate detailed drug administration records, enable the retrospective reuse of hospital data to develop more granular and dynamic measures of in-hospital drug exposure.

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Methods and Instruments in Medical Informatics

Nowadays, lung cancer has a significantly high incidence rate worldwide. The mortality rate of lung cancer continues to rise; it is more common in middle-aged and older individuals and poses a great threat to human health.

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Tools, Programs and Algorithms

Cochrane plain language summaries (PLSs) aim to make systematic review findings more accessible to the general public. However, inconsistencies in how conclusions are presented may impact comprehension and decision-making. Classifying PLSs based on conclusiveness can improve clarity and facilitate informed health decisions.

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Advanced Data Analytics in eHealth

Despite the increasing use of machine learning (ML) in clinical research, the early stages of data preparation, especially for structured clinical data, often receive limited methodological scrutiny. These datasets typically contain missing values, complex categorical variables, and imbalanced class distributions, all of which complicate downstream model development and interpretation.

Preprints Open for Peer Review

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