Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare

Papers
(The H4-Index of Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare is 23. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-06-01 to 2025-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
Teleneurocritical care is associated with equivalent billable charges to in-person neurocritical care for patients with acute stroke242
A randomised trial of real-time video counselling for smoking cessation among rural and remote residents115
Telemonitoring of motor skills using the Alberta Infant Motor Scale for at-risk infants in the first year of life89
Swallowing muscle training for oropharyngeal dysphagia: A non-inferiority study of online versus face-to-face therapy70
Effects of mobile apps intervention on medication adherence and type 2 diabetes mellitus control: A systematic review and meta-analysis68
Does tele-exercise training for tetraplegia meet the spinal cord injury-specific physical activity guidelines? A 7-month longitudinal study64
Exploring the role of telehealth in providing equitable healthcare to the vulnerable patient population during COVID-1951
Economic assessment of the impact of telecare on the use of social care resources using a zero-inflated, hierarchical linear statistical model45
Measuring disparities in virtual healthcare and outcomes in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients during the COVID-19 pandemic44
National emergency medical teleconsultation: A novel system applied during the COVID-19 pandemic in Taiwan41
Expansion of telehealth curriculum: National survey of clinical education leaders41
Using the Double Diamond model to co-design a dementia caregivers telehealth peer support program39
Is asynchronous telerehabilitation equal to synchronous telerehabilitation in COVID-19 survivors with classes 4–6?38
Twenty-first century management of diabetes with shared telemedicine appointments38
Patient characteristics associated with the successful transition to virtual care: Lessons learned from the first million patients31
Harnessing the power of telemedicine to accomplish international pediatric outcome research during the COVID-19 pandemic28
Effects of technology-enabled blood pressure monitoring in primary care: A quasi-experimental trial27
Can video-based telehealth examinations of the abdomen safely determine the need for imaging?26
Using data analytics for telehealth utilization: A case study in Arkansas26
The development, validation and application of remote blood sample collection in telehealth programmes25
Wait times and patient throughput after the implementation of a novel model of virtual care in an outpatient neurology clinic: A retrospective analysis25
Distinguishing stroke from mimics in telemedicine: How well does the TM-Score perform in a Brazilian telestroke network?23
Opportunities for clinical decision support targeting medication safety in remote primary care management of chronic kidney disease: A qualitative study in Northern Australia23
A multi-stakeholder approach is needed to reduce the digital divide and encourage equitable access to telehealth23
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