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Skip search results from other journals and go to results- 3 Journal of Medical Internet Research
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Prior to launching interviews with a full sample (n=40), we conducted 3 pilot interviews with parents to ensure clarity of our questions and definitions. The first portion of the open-ended interview guide inquired about perceived needs, desires, and care-seeking decisions when seeking care generally for a child’s ARTI, with results reported previously [19].
JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e49170
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Parent-Reported Use of Pediatric Primary Care Telemedicine: Survey Study
Respondents were excluded from these counts (n=64) if they were identified as completing the survey in less than one third of the median time of 17 minutes, refusing or skipping more than 50% of items, or submitting straight-lined responses to grid questions.
J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e42892
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Participants included individuals in training (n=6) as well as individuals with more than 20 years of practice (n=9). Participant characteristics were similar in each phase with the exception of years of experience, with more clinicians with more than 21 years in practice in phase 1 (n=7; 6 PCPs and 1 adolescent medicine specialist) than in phase 2 (n=2; 1 PCP and 1 adolescent medicine specialist).
JMIR Hum Factors 2021;8(3):e25568
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Practice characteristics by low, intermediate, or high telemedicine use (N=45).
a N/A: not applicable.
b APPs: advanced practice providers.
c Based on US Department of Agriculture rural-urban continuum codes.
Across all tertiles, telemedicine visits were most common for mental health and skin/soft tissue–related diagnoses (Table 2). However, the percentage of visits in each of these diagnostic categories varied with practice-level telemedicine use.
J Med Internet Res 2020;22(12):e24345
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Parent Perspectives on Family-Centered Pediatric Electronic Consultations: Qualitative Study
J Med Internet Res 2020;22(4):e16954
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