| Literature DB >> 32329746 |
Liam R Maclachlan1, Kathryn Mills2, Belinda J Lawford3, Thorlene Egerton3, Jenny Setchell1, Leanne M Hall1, Melanie L Plinsinga1, Manuela Besomi1, Pek Ling Teo3, Jillian P Eyles4,5, Rebecca Mellor1, Luciano Melo6, Sarah Robbins4,5, Paul W Hodges1, David J Hunter4,5, Bill Vicenzino1, Kim L Bennell3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Online support groups (OSGs) are one way for people with chronic diseases, their family or friends, and health professionals to communicate, gain information, and provide social support. As the number of peer-to-peer OSGs for chronic musculoskeletal conditions grows, it is important to gain insight into the different designs of groups available, who is accessing them, if and how they may be effective, and what strategies are being used to implement or increase consumer engagement.Entities:
Keywords: empowerment; musculoskeletal diseases; online social networking; social support
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32329746 PMCID: PMC7210497 DOI: 10.2196/15822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Study eligibility flow.
Design, sample size, and aims of included studies.
| References | Countrya | Study design | Sample size/sample volume | Study aim |
| Ammerlaan et al [ | The Netherlands | Prospective feasibility (participant survey) | 12 members | To test the feasibility of the Web-based and face-to-face self-management program |
| Bright et al [ | United Kingdom | Retrospective online participant survey | 152 respondents | To identify the characteristics and motivations of Web-based health information seekers accessing the Web-based health community |
| Camerini et al [ | Switzerland | Retrospective online participant survey | 209 respondents | To evaluate the effectiveness of an internet-based patient education intervention |
| Hadert and Rodham [ | United Kingdom | Retrospective, qualitative, interpretive, phenomenological analysis | 374 members, 1068 posts | To investigate how and why an arthritis Web-based message board was used |
| Shigaki et al [ | United States | Retrospective, qualitative | 30 participants | To evaluate social interactions among individuals with rheumatoid arthritis participating in an empirically based, cognitive-behavioral, self-management, peer support program delivered in a Web-based format |
| Smarr et al [ | United States | Feasibility | 114 members, 448 posts | To describe the Web-based transformation of an empirically validated, clinic-based, self-management program for rheumatoid arthritis |
| Smedley et al [ | United Kingdom | Retrospective qualitative content analysis | 23 members, 223 posts | To explore the experiences of members in a newly launched complex regional pain syndrome discussion forum to examine how support processes become established |
| Smedley et al [ | United Kingdom | Retrospective, qualitative thematic analysis | 59 moderators, 790 posts | To identify and describe the activities performed by Web-based support community moderators |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | The Netherlands | Semistructured interviews | 32 participants | To explore if, and in which ways, patients feel empowered by participation in OSGsb |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | The Netherlands | Retrospective online participant survey | 528 respondents | To explore if lurkers in Web-based patient support groups profit to the same extent as posters do |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | The Netherlands | Retrospective qualitative content analysis | 1500 posts | To explore the extent to which potential disadvantages actually occur when participating in OSGs |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | The Netherlands | Retrospective online participant survey | 528 respondents | To explore the extent to which patients feel empowered by their participation in OSGs and what processes occurring in these groups are related to the empowering outcomes |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | The Netherlands | Semistructured interviews | 23 Web-masters | To determine the success factors of OSGs for patients and the motives and goals of people who start such groups |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | The Netherlands | Prospective participant survey | 679 respondents | To explore factors that facilitate or impede engagement in face-to-face and Web-based peer support |
| van der Vaart et al [ | The Netherlands | Prospective participant survey | 227 respondents | To examine current disease-related internet use and intentions to use various Web-based support services on a hospital-based interactive health communication app of patients with rheumatic diseases |
| Walker [ | United States | Retrospective qualitative content analysis | 292 posts | To explore how a relatively new medium of a disease-specific Facebook group is used to address needs of people affected by thoracic outlet syndrome |
| Willis [ | United States | Retrospective qualitative discourse analysis (ethnomethodology) | 5 members, 8231 posts | To understand how patients with arthritis use Web-based health communities to exchange disease-related information to better manage their chronic disease |
| Willis [ | United States | Retrospective qualitative discourse analysis (ethnomethodology) | 8231 posts | To examine self-efficacy within the computer-mediated communication of 4 Web-based health communities used by people with arthritis |
| Willis and Royne [ | United States | Retrospective quantitative content analysis | 1960 posts | To examine the computer-mediated communication within Web-based health communities for evidence of chronic disease self-management behaviors |
| Xing et al [ | United States | Retrospective content analysis and survival analysis | 100,000 users, 200,000 user posts | To understand how requests for and provisions of informational support by members with different social roles influence members’ continued participation in Web-based health communities |
aOrigin of online support groups when they are multinational.
bOSG: online support group.
Description of online support groups included for review.
| References | Target population | Type of platform | Duration of OSGa | Language | Frequency of posts | Presence/source of moderation |
| Ammerlaan et al [ | Young adults (age 16-25 years) with arthritis | Private website; planned weekly chat group (90 min) | 6 weeks | Dutch | NRb | Yes/peer |
| Bright et al [ | Adults with knee problems | Private website | 1 month | English | NR | No |
| Camerini et al [ | Adults with FMSc | Private website; also included video and textual material on coping | Mean 167 days (SD 67.6) | Italian | NR | No |
| Hadert and Rodham [ | Adults with arthritis | Public website | 3 months | English | NR | No |
| Shigaki et al [ | Adults with RAd | Private website | 10 weeks | English | NR | No |
| Smarr et al [ | Adults with RA | Private website with multiple shared resources (eg, education material and audio files) | Average of 10 weeks | English | NR | Yes/health professional |
| Smedley et al [ | Adults with CRPSe | 4 private forums | 6 months | English | 17=low frequency postersf (average 9.5 posts); 6=high-frequency posters | Yes/peer |
| Smedley et al [ | Adults with arthritis, CRPS, Crohn disease, depression, Huntington disease, and diabetes | 6 public discussion forums | NR | English | 15 posts per moderator | Yes/peer |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Adults with arthritis, FMS, or breast cancer | 9 public websites | NR | Dutch | Posters >1/day=140; 1/day=121; >1/week=96; 1/week=31; 1/month=6; and <1/month=6 | No |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Adults with arthritis, FMS, or breast cancer | 8 public websites | 1 year (range 0-6 years) | Dutch | Minimum=1/day | Yes/peer |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Adults with arthritis, FMS, or breast cancer | 8 public websites | 3 months | Dutch | 1 or 2 messages | No |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Adults with arthritis, FMS, or breast cancer | Public websites | Up to 2.5 years | Dutch | Posters >1/day=146; 1/day=139; >1/week=124; 1/week=50; 1/month=13; and <1/month=13 | No |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Adults with arthritis, FMS, or breast cancer | 10 Public websites, 13 private websites, 18 stand-alone (not embedded in organization website/forum) OSGs, and 5 patient advocacy websites | NR | Dutch | Ranged from a few messages per week to hundreds of messages daily | Yes |
| van der Vaart et al [ | Individuals with rheumatic diagnosis | Private app | NR | Dutch | NR | No |
| Walker [ | Adults with thoracic outlet syndrome | Public; hosted on Facebook | 7 months | English | NR | NR |
| Willis [ | Adults with arthritis | 4 public websites | NR | English | Once every 4 days | No |
| Willis [ | Adults with arthritis | 4 public websites | NR | English | Only high-frequency posters participated | No |
| Willis and Royne [ | Adults with arthritis | 4 public websites | 4 weeks | English | NR | No |
| Xing et al [ | Individuals with (or associated with) FMS | Public website | Up to 6 years | English | Core group members: average of 393 posts; peripheral members: 9.58 posts | Possible |
aOSG: online support group.
bNR: not reported.
cFMS: fibromyalgia.
dRA: rheumatoid arthritis.
eCRPS: complex regional pain syndrome.
fPoster: people who write comments on online support group pages.
Characteristics of online support group users.
| References | Age (years), mean (range or SD) | Gender (female/male) | Education levels | Occupation | Marital status | Motivation for joining |
| Ammerlaan et al [ | 22 (range: 17-25) | 9/1 | Vocational training: 1; advanced vocational training: 7; college/university: 2 | N/Aa | N/A | N/A |
| Bright et al [ | 40.1 | 93/59 | Higher education qualifications: 114 | Employed: 87; unemployed: 65 | Cohabiting: 104 | Emotional support (clarity regarding advice and treatments), social support (sharing experiences and information), and condition support (achieving a sense of authority) |
| Camerini et al [ | 49 (range: 25-74) | 199/10 | 8 years of schooling: 36; high school/university: 163; not reported: 10 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Hadert and Rodham [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Needing to be believed, information exchange, sharing support, and sharing emotions |
| Shigaki et al [ | 49.4 (range: 30.1-68.5) | 28/2 | Mean years of education: 15 (range: 12-20) years | N/A | Married: 19 | N/A |
| Smarr et al [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Smedley et al [ | 36.6 (range: 20-54)b | 18/5 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Smedley et al [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | 43 (range: 21-75) | 30/2 | Lower: 5; medium: 14; high: 13 | Unemployed/unable to work: 25; employed: 7 | Married/cohabiting: 26; not married: 6 | N/A |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | Postersc: 43 (SD 10.4); lurkersd: 47 (SD 9.9) | Posters: 392/27; lurkers: 102/7 | Posters—lower: 129; medium: 170; high: 111. Lurkers—lower: 42; medium: 43; high: 24 | Posters—working >20 hours: 128; working ≤20 hours: 54; unemployed: 234. Lurkers—working >20 hours: 39; working ≤20 hours: 11; unemployed:59 | Posters—in a relationship: 331; single: 88. Lurkers—in a relationship: 85; single: 25 | N/A |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | 38 (range: 21-65) | 293/29; unknown: 25 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | 44 (range: 17-75) | 494/34 | Lower: 171; medium: 213; high: 135 | Working >20 hours: 167; working ≤20 hours: 65; unemployed: 293 | In a relationship: 415; single: 113 | N/A |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | 46 (range: 24-65) | 20/3 | N/A | N/A | N/A | Provide information and social support |
| van Uden-Kraan et al [ | 54 (range: 18-75) | 571/106 | Lower: 404; medium: 176; high: 94 | Employed: 212; unemployed: 447 | Married/cohabiting: 530; single: 128 | Improve mental health and past behaviors with support groups |
| van der Vaart et al [ | 52 (SD 11) | 143/84 | Lower: 61; average: 116; high: 46; unknown: 4 | Employed: 119; unemployed: 106 | Married/cohabiting: 183; single: 42; unknown: 2 | Poor mental health and improving health literacye |
| Walker [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Willis [ | Range: 21-83 | 15/5 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Willis [ | Range: 21-83 | 15/5 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Willis and Royne [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Xing et al [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
aN/A: not applicable.
bAge was available for 9 participants, and the duration of symptoms was available for 14 participants.
cPoster: people who write comments on online support group pages.
dLurker: people who read material without contributing posts to the forum.
ePeople with good health literacy were more likely to use peer support services to further improve knowledge.