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Journal ArticleDOI

Who talks? The social psychology of illness support groups.

TLDR
Support seeking was highest for diseases viewed as stigmatizing and was lowest for less embarrassing but equally devastating disorders, such as heart disease, and implications for social comparison theory and its applications in health care are discussed.
Abstract
More Americans try to change their health behaviors through self-help than through all other forms of professionally designed programs. Mutual support groups, involving little or no cost to participants, have a powerful effect on mental and physical health, yet little is known about patterns of support group participation in health care. What kinds of illness experiences prompt patients to seek each other's company? In an effort to observe social comparison processes with real-world relevance, support group participation was measured for 20 disease categories in 4 metropolitan areas (New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Dallas) and on 2 on-line forums. Support seeking was highest for diseases viewed as stigmatizing (e.g., AIDS, alcoholism, breast and prostate cancer) and was lowest for less embarrassing but equally devastating disorders, such as heart disease. The authors discuss implications for social comparison theory and its applications in health care.

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Deep learning for pollen allergy surveillance from twitter in Australia

TL;DR: The case-study presented demonstrates an application of ’black-box’ approach to the real-world problem, along with its internal workings demonstration towards more transparent, interpretable and reproducible decision-making in health informatics domain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advice reification, learning, and emergent collective intelligence in online health support communities

TL;DR: Mixed methods are used to investigate how invisible social processes lead advice to be adapted over time by forum members, and suggest that RoA could be used as the basis of a mid-level theory that treats online support communities and bundles of advice trajectories embedded in a shifting sociotechnical context.
Journal Article

The Membership Life Cycle in Online Support Groups

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the membership life cycle in online support groups for people with depression by examining 558 people with various membership durations in 16 online groups and found that membership duration was associated with age, self-defined condition, frequency of visits, active posting, benefits gained from participation, and the level of depression related to both behavioral and psychological aspects of participation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Social Comparison Processes

Leon Festinger
- 01 May 1954 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors pointed out that there is a strong functional tie between opinions and abilities in humans and that the ability evaluation of an individual can be expressed as a comparison of the performance of a particular ability with other abilities.
Book

Statistical abstract of the United States

TL;DR: The Red River of the North basin of the Philippines was considered a part of the Louisiana Purchase by the United States Department of Commerce in the 1939 Census Atlas of the United Philippines as discussed by the authors.
Book

The theory and practice of group psychotherapy

TL;DR: Yalom as mentioned in this paper described the course of therapy from both the patient's and the therapist's viewpoint in Encounter Groups: First Facts (1973) and Every Day gets a Little Closer: A Twice-Told Therapy (1974).
Journal ArticleDOI

Internet paradox: A social technology that reduces social involvement and psychological well-being?

TL;DR: Greater use of the Internet was associated with declines in participants' communication with family members in the household, declines in the size of their social circle, and increases in their depression and loneliness.
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