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Platform Technology for Extended Reality Biofeedback Training Under Operant Conditioning for Functional Limb Weakness: Protocol for the Coproduction of an at-Home Solution (React2Home)

Platform Technology for Extended Reality Biofeedback Training Under Operant Conditioning for Functional Limb Weakness: Protocol for the Coproduction of an at-Home Solution (React2Home)

Our proposal is therefore ideally timed [85], aiming to bring cost-effective and accessible VR rehabilitation [74] into the homes of people with FMD. We aim to create a scalable, home-based rehabilitation solution that shifts care from clinic to home with a stepped care model [86,87]. Home care reduces the need for travel; promotes sustainable health care; and offers accessible, personalized rehabilitation.

Anirban Dutta, Abhijit Das

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e70620

Outcomes of an App-Based Intervention to Target Naming Among Individuals With Poststroke Aphasia: Virtual Randomized Controlled Trial

Outcomes of an App-Based Intervention to Target Naming Among Individuals With Poststroke Aphasia: Virtual Randomized Controlled Trial

Speech-language pathologists (SLPs) provide rehabilitation services for people with aphasia, often focusing on remediation of the language impairment or training of compensatory strategies. Such interventions have been shown to improve outcomes for people with aphasia [6,7], but constraints on health care resources often prevent people with aphasia from receiving these services, especially in the chronic stages.

Esther S Kim, Laura Laird, Carlee Wilson, Steven Stewart, Philip Mildner, Sebastian Möller, Raimund Schatz, Robert P Spang, Jan-Niklas Voigt-Antons, Elizabeth Rochon

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e67711

How AI-Based Digital Rehabilitation Improves End-User Adherence: Rapid Review

How AI-Based Digital Rehabilitation Improves End-User Adherence: Rapid Review

AI tools are becoming more adept at learning from extensive and intricate data, using algorithms to acquire knowledge, analyze, and subsequently aid in different clinical and rehabilitation procedures [9]. Rehabilitation technology supported by AI signifies a groundbreaking and revolutionary method in the rehabilitation sector, which can be used to customize and complement the overall quality of traditional rehabilitation strategies [10].

Mahsa MohammadNamdar, Michael Lowery Wilson, Kari-Pekka Murtonen, Eeva Aartolahti, Michael Oduor, Katariina Korniloff

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2025;12:e69763

Ethics and Equity Challenges in Telerehabilitation for Older Adults: Rapid Review

Ethics and Equity Challenges in Telerehabilitation for Older Adults: Rapid Review

The use of technology in rehabilitation is increasing worldwide, including its application in delivering services to the older adults population [1]. This is transforming how health care services are delivered to the aging population [2]. Telerehabilitation, which involves the evaluation and treatment of patients through technology, has emerged as an attractive option for older adults who may have multiple comorbidities [1,3].

Mirella Veras, Louis-Pierre Auger, Jennifer Sigouin, Nahid Gheidari, Michelle LA Nelson, William C Miller, Anne Hudon, Dahlia Kairy

JMIR Aging 2025;8:e69660

Assessing Physical Therapists’ Expectations and Experiences With an Automated Rehabilitation System Using Technology Acceptance Model: Multiple Methods Pilot Study

Assessing Physical Therapists’ Expectations and Experiences With an Automated Rehabilitation System Using Technology Acceptance Model: Multiple Methods Pilot Study

Thus, this study will add to the literature on the practical use of wearable technology in clinical settings as an adjunct to medically necessary knee rehabilitation. The study builds on previous research indicating that a clinical application for the automated rehabilitation system is needed [11] and explores the question “What are physical therapists’ perceptions regarding the design and functional requirements of innovative wearable technology for knee rehabilitation?”

Cynthia Williams, Lindsay Toth, Raine Osborne, Chloe E Bailey, Aishwarya Joshi

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2025;12:e67440

Perspectives From Canadian People With Visual Impairments in Everyday Environments Outside the Home: Qualitative Insights for Assistive Technology Development

Perspectives From Canadian People With Visual Impairments in Everyday Environments Outside the Home: Qualitative Insights for Assistive Technology Development

The Lancet Global Health Commission on Global Eye Health identified the provision of vision rehabilitation services and assistive technologies (ATs) as key to improving the functional abilities and quality of life of people with visual impairments [8,9].

Prajjol Raj Puri, Andréanne Coutaller, Frédérique Gwade, Soutongnoma Safiata Kabore, Deborah Annan, Joseph Paul Nemargut

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2025;12:e73380

An Integrated Virtual Reality–Based Telerehabilitation Platform to Support Recovery and Maintenance of Functional Abilities Among Older Adults: Protocol for a Usability and Acceptability Study

An Integrated Virtual Reality–Based Telerehabilitation Platform to Support Recovery and Maintenance of Functional Abilities Among Older Adults: Protocol for a Usability and Acceptability Study

Such a shift provides several advantages, including making rehabilitation programs more adaptable to patients’ schedules, partially alleviating the time constraints experienced by therapists, reaching geographically isolated areas without clinical facilities, and reducing costs (eg, by decreasing travel to rehabilitation clinics or enabling home visits) [17,18]. In light of this, research regarding the usability and effectiveness of VR in rehabilitation has grown recently.

Marco Benadduci, Claudia Franceschetti, Rachele Alessandra Marziali, Sebastian Frese, Peter Stephan Sándor, Valentina Tombolesi, Valentina Bozzi, Lorena Rossi

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e68358

Remote Digital Health Interventions to Support the Physical, Functional, or Psychological Rehabilitation of Adult Patients With Major Traumatic Injuries: Protocol for a Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials

Remote Digital Health Interventions to Support the Physical, Functional, or Psychological Rehabilitation of Adult Patients With Major Traumatic Injuries: Protocol for a Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials

While there has been a recognition that more lives are being saved, rehabilitation following trauma is greatly behind, with global estimates of at least one in every 3 people needing rehabilitation services at some point throughout their injury [23]. Many people who have had major trauma are left with disability, medical dependency, family disruption, and ongoing psychosocial issues [16,24].

Hiyam Al-Jabr, Emma Salt, John Stephenson, Esra Hamdan, Toby Helliwell

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e67675

Factors Influencing Physicians' Referral Decision-Making for Rehabilitation Outpatient Services in the Health Care Landscape of China: Cross-Sectional Study

Factors Influencing Physicians' Referral Decision-Making for Rehabilitation Outpatient Services in the Health Care Landscape of China: Cross-Sectional Study

Therefore, this study aims to investigate the factors influencing Chinese rehabilitation physicians’ referral decisions for outpatient rehabilitation patients, with the findings expected to provide preliminary insights for optimizing referral processes in China’s rehabilitation system or similar health care systems worldwide. The decision to focus specifically on outpatient rehabilitation patients was driven by the unique referral challenges and service demands associated with this population.

Yawei Li, Ruixue Ye, Linlin Shan, Kun Wang, Kaiwen Xue, Zeyu Zhang, Yingzi Hao, Yucong Zou, Xiaoxuan Li, Yulong Wang

Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e64464

Reducing Methamphetamine Use in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities With the “We Can Do This” Web App: Qualitative Evaluation of Acceptability and Feasibility

Reducing Methamphetamine Use in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities With the “We Can Do This” Web App: Qualitative Evaluation of Acceptability and Feasibility

This study sought to understand the acceptability and feasibility of the web application when used in the context of primary health care and residential rehabilitation services, as opposed to when used as a self-directed intervention in the community. This study is framed within an Indigenous research paradigm [20].

Leda Sivak, Rachel Reilly, Shani Crumpen, Carla Treloar, Rebecca McKetin, Julia Butt, Yvette Roe, Nadine Ezard, Brendan Quinn, Jack Nagle, Wade Longbottom, Clifford Warrior, James Ward

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e58369