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JMIR Infodemiology

Focusing on determinants and distribution of health information and misinformation on the internet, and its effect on public and individual health.

Editor-in-Chief:

Tim Ken Mackey, MAS, PhD, University of California San Diego, USA


Impact Factor 2.3 More information about Impact Factor CiteScore 6.5 More information about CiteScore

JMIR Infodemiology (JI, ISSN 2564-1891, (Journal Impact Factor 2.3, Journal Citation Reports 2025 from Clarivate) launched in 2021, is a premier, open-access, peer-reviewed journal, focusing on infodemiology, the study of determinants and the distribution of health information and misinformation on the internet, and its effect on public and individual health. The new scientific discipline of "Infodemiology," first introduced in 2002, has been gaining momentum due to the COVID-19 infodemic, with the WHO recognizing it as an important pillar in managing public health emergencies. JMIR Publications is proud to have been spearheading the advancement of this new scientific discipline for more than a decade. We are now accelerating the development of this new interdisciplinary discipline with the first and only journal devoted to this rapidly evolving field, by bringing together thought leaders in research, data science, and policy. Areas of interest include information monitoring (infoveillance, including social listening), eHealth literacy and science literacy, knowledge refinement and quality improvement processes and policies, and the influence of political and commercial interests on effective knowledge translation. 

 The journal is indexed in PubMed Central/PubMedMEDLINEScopusDOAJWeb of Science, EBSCO/EBSCO Essentials, and CABI.

JMIR Infodemiology received a Journal Impact Factor of 2.3 (Source:Journal Citation Reports 2025 from Clarivate). 

JMIR Infodemiology recieved a Scopus CiteScore of 6.5 (2024), placing it in the 87th percentile (#39 of 320) as a Q1 journal in the field of Health Policy.

Recent Articles

Nurse administering COVID-19 vaccine injection to a person's arm.
Vaccination Sentiment and Anti-Vaccination Infodemiology

The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of effective health communication and reliable information for crisis management, particularly following the introduction of vaccinations. Varied attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination and an overwhelming amount of online information complicated communication and pandemic management. Previous studies have often focused on general vaccination behavior and its correlation with vaccination attitudes, establishing a link between information-seeking and vaccination decisions. However, there is insufficient analysis distinguishing specific user groups based on their actual online information behavior regarding COVID-19 vaccination and examining its correlation with vaccination behavior.

Man with beard and tattoos looking at smartphone in dimly lit room
Infoveillance and Social Listening

Depression has become a major global public health challenge, and early intervention is critical for improving patient outcomes. Current depression detection techniques based on social media data (traditional risk detection) rely heavily on users’ complete historical information, which cannot meet the timeliness requirements of early intervention. This underscores the need for early risk detection (ERD) methods emphasizing early-stage, real-time warning. However, existing ERD studies have notable limitations such as (1) they overlook temporal activity patterns hidden in posting time stamps, missing vital warning signals; and (2) they depend on static templates or resource-intensive sequence models, resulting in limited interpretability and inefficient use of early data, ultimately constraining their clinical applicability for early intervention.

Nurse administering vaccine injection to patient's arm with cotton swab
Misinformation and Disinformation Outbreaks and Information Prevalence Studies

Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine hesitancy remains a significant public health challenge in Japan, where proactive vaccination recommendations were suspended between 2013 and 2021. The resulting information gap between medical institutions and vaccine-hesitant populations is exacerbated by misinformation on social media platforms. Traditional public health communication strategies cannot address individual queries while simultaneously monitoring population-level discourse.

Diagram of computational and annotation phases in misinformation analysis, including LLM and human annotation.
Bots and AI Approaches to Detect and Counter Misinformation

Public discourse is significantly impacted by the rapid spread of misinformation on social media platforms. Human moderators, while capable of performing well, face many challenges due to scalability. While large language models (LLMs) show great potential across various language tasks, their capacity for cognitive and contextual analysis, in detecting and interpreting misinformation, remains less evaluated.

Two young women wearing face masks and headphones sit on a park bench, one using a smartphone.
Assessing and Building eHealth / Digital Literacy in Populations

The spread of misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of evidence-based information. The SANGYAN podcast promotes evidence-based knowledge on health-related issues in multiple languages in a simple, cost-effective, and concise manner. This provides individuals access to the appropriate information in an accessible manner.

Young woman with curly hair looking at her smartphone outdoors
Data Sources and Open Data for Infodemiology

Despite the documented clinical efficacy of weight loss medications, few large-scale mixed methods studies have captured the experiences of individuals taking these medications.

Hands holding a syringe with a "Vaccine" checklist in the background.
Infoveillance and Social Listening

The rise of social media has significantly impacted public health programs, with platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, X (formerly known as Twitter), Instagram, and, more recently, TikTok being used to promote health information, raise awareness about disease outbreaks, and support disease prevention programs. However, the diverse and often unverified nature of the content on social media can make it challenging to discern accurate information, contributing to user uncertainty, which may in turn contribute to low vaccination rates in some regions. This is especially true in Louisiana as its COVID-19 vaccination rates were among the lowest in the country in 2022. Therefore, understanding public sentiment on social media and developing targeted campaigns to counter unverified information is essential for advancing public health campaigns.

Man in blue shirt and glasses working on a laptop on a couch.
Health and Risk Communication

Male mental health remains a major global concern, with men underrepresented in mental health care and overrepresented in suicide statistics. Masculine norms that link emotional restraint with strength can discourage help-seeking and vulnerability. Anonymous digital spaces such as Reddit (Reddit Inc) and YouTube (Google LLC) have become informal support environments where men share experiences and emotions outside traditional constraints. Understanding these interactions offers insight into masculine identity and help-seeking behavior.

Hands typing on a laptop with digital document overlays, representing online content creation.
Research Letter

This cross-sectional evaluation of six consumer-facing large language model platforms found significant heterogeneity in safeguard performance against the generation of health disinformation, with Claude and ChatGPT demonstrating complete resistance across all prompt types, while Copilot, Meta AI, Grok, and Gemini exhibited substantial vulnerabilities.

People wearing masks and social distancing in a classroom setting
Infodemic Management

In fall 2021, Tennessee school districts faced heightened debates over COVID-19 mitigation amid rising cases, limited vaccination availability, and widespread misinformation. School board meetings (SBMs) served as pivotal decision-making forums influencing district policies. This study investigated perceptions and misinformation regarding the COVID-19 mask mandate at SBMs held within 6 of Tennessee’s largest school districts. With widespread debate over pandemic measures, including mask use in schools, understanding community sentiments is crucial for guiding public health policies.

Young woman in blue striped shirt intently looking at smartphone screen with friends using phones nearby.
Health and Risk Communication

Youths are increasingly turning to TikTok for mental health information, making the platform an important space where young people encounter portrayals of mental illness. While such visibility can raise awareness, reduce stigma, and make young people feel more connected and understood in their experiences, concerns have been raised about the diagnostic accuracy of this content, which is often produced by nonprofessionals and presented using emotionally appealing stylistic features. Although prior research has examined mental health content on TikTok broadly, little is known about how depression-related symptoms are portrayed by creators on the platform.

Person holding phone with crypto logo, showing upward trend graph and heart icon.
Infoveillance and Social Listening

Neurodevelopmental disorders, especially attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD), have seen a marked rise in public attention, yet research on public opinion remains limited. Social media analysis offers real-time, unfiltered insights into public perceptions, enabling empirical examination of public attitudes and opinions.

Preprints Open for Peer Review

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