| Literature DB >> 26965990 |
Chris Allen1, Ivaylo Vassilev, Anne Kennedy, Anne Rogers.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent years have seen an exponential increase in people with long-term conditions using the Internet for information and support. Prior research has examined support for long-term condition self-management through the provision of illness, everyday, and emotional work in the context of traditional offline communities. However, less is known about how communities hosted in digital spaces contribute through the creation of social ties and the mobilization of an online illness "workforce."Entities:
Keywords: chronic disease; illness work; long-term conditions; patient online communities; qualitative meta-synthesis; self-care; self-management; social media; social networks
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26965990 PMCID: PMC4807245 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.5260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Flowchart of systematic search strategy, process and selection of research papers for review.
Articles included in the meta-synthesis and quality appraisal scores using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP) tool.
| Study | Condition | Platform | Method | Sample | Study details | CASP scorea |
| Attard and Coulson [ | Parkinson disease | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Qualitative thematic analysis of messages posted to a discussion board | 1013 messages posted to the board between 2003-2010 | To explore the experiences of members of a Parkinson’s disease forum | 9 |
| Barker [ | Fibromyalgia | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Thematic analysis | 249 participants in Fibrospot | Examines the conflicts between lay and expert knowledge in electronic support groups | 9 |
| Brown and Altice [ | Opioid dependence | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Grounded theory approach | 121 threads from 13 discussion boards in a 26-month period | To identify facilitators of self-treatment by online buprenorphine/naloxone users | 9 |
| Coulson [ | Alcohol use disorder | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Inductive thematic analysis-netnography | 738 messages on 3 UK-based discussion boards | To explore in-depth how members of online alcohol use disorder communities engage with peer-to-peer support | 9 |
| Coursaris and Liu [ | HIV/AIDS | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Content and thematic analysis | 5000 postings(not disclosed how many participants contributed to this) | To provide an in-depth understanding of social support exchanges in online HIV/AIDS self-help groups | 8 |
| Greene et al [ | Diabetes | Content analysis | 233 wall posts and 457 discussion topics | Examine the content of communication in Facebook communities dedicated to diabetes | 8 | |
| Hadert and Rodham [ | Arthritis | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Interpretive phenomenological approach | 60 users who posted 87 initial messages + 314 users who posted 981 replies | To discover how and why the online arthritis message board was used | 9 |
| Kazmer et al [ | ALS | Patients Like Me (an online community that connects people with the same condition) | Inductive thematic analysis | 1000 randomly selected messages from an available 2500 messages posted between Feb 2006-Nov 2008 | How and why knowledge is shared among the distributed participants in the PLM-ALS threaded discussion forum | 9 |
| Kirk and Milnes [ | Cystic fibrosis | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Online ethnographical approach | 279 individuals who participated in forum over a 4-month period | To explore how online peer support is used by young people and parents to support self-care in relation to cystic fibrosis | 9 |
| Loanne and D’Alessandro [ | Motor neuron disease/ALS | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Content analysis | 499 posts made by 133 participants | Explores whether social capital can exist in an online health community for people affected by MND/ALS | 8 |
| Matura et al [ | Pulmonary hypertension | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Qualitative descriptive methodology | Convenience sample (all posts in 2010) | To determine how patients with pulmonary hypertension use online discussion boards | 9 |
| Mazzoni and Cicognani [ | Systematic lupus erythematosus | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Content analysis | 118 posts corresponding to 118 authors | To explain the demand/supply of social support through the Internet in relation to the description of personal illness experience | 9 |
| Merolli et al [ | Chronic pain | Did not specify; patients recruited through Facebook, Twitter, Daily Strength, and Patients Like Me | Thematic content analysis; online survey | 218 people with chronic pain who completed an online survey | To examine what social media therapeutically affords people with chronic pain who are self-managing their condition | 9 |
| Mo and Coulson [ | HIV/AIDS | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Thematic analysis of completed online surveys | 115 participants who completed an online survey | To explore the potential empowering and disempowering outcomes of online support group use by those with HIV/AIDS | 9 |
| Rodham et al [ | Complex regional pain syndrome | Disease-specific discussion board/forum. | Interpretive phenomenological analysis | 60 participants who posted or commented on a post on a discussion forum in a 4-month period | To explore how an online message board designed for patients and carers of patients with CRPS was used; specifically, sought to explore the exchanges that took place on the online message board | 10 |
| Van Berkel et al [ | ALS, diabetes, ADHD | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Deductive thematic analysis | 5532 posts from seven message boards | To examine whether empowerment processes occur on message boards discussing medicines used to treat three chronic conditions as well as examining the quality of information that is shared | 9 |
| Van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Fibromyalgia, arthritis, breast cancer | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Content analysis of postings to a discussion board/forum | Random sample of 1500 postings to discussion board/forum for fibromyalgia, arthritis, breast cancer | To explore who uses online support groups, what topics are discussed, and what self-help mechanisms are used in these groups | 8 |
| Van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Fibromyalgia, breast cancer, arthritis | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Semi-structured interviews, inductive analysis | 32 participants | To explore if, and in which ways, patients feel empowered by participation in patient online communities | 9 |
| Wentzer and Bygholm [ | COPD and fertility problems | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Qualitative analysis using critical interpretation and narrative analysis | 4301 posts to 2 forums | Is communication in online patient support groups a source of individual and/or collective empowerment? | 8 |
| Willis [ | Arthritis | Disease-specific discussion board/forum | Ethnomethodology | 20 members across 4 communities | To understand how patient with arthritis use patient online communities to exchange illness related information to better manage their long-term condition | 9 |
| Zhang et al [ | Diabetes | Case study | Case study of a Facebook group with 30,000 users | Explores Facebook as a platform for health information and communication, specifically what the characteristics of the Facebook diabetes group and its members | 8 |
a Maximum score is 10.
Figure 2Summary of second- (blue) and third-order (gray) constructs in relation to the negotiation of self-management support in patient online communities.