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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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The Internet and Social Life

TL;DR: The evidence suggests that while these effects are largely dependent on the particular goals that users bring to the interaction-such as self-expression, affiliation, or competition-they also interact in important ways with the unique qualities of the Internet communication situation.
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Rebooting Psychotherapy Research and Practice to Reduce the Burden of Mental Illness

TL;DR: Various models of delivery are illustrated to convey opportunities provided by technology, special settings and nontraditional service providers, self-help interventions, and the media for reducing the burden of mental illness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Peer Support/Peer Provided Services Underlying Processes, Benefits, and Critical Ingredients

TL;DR: The article defines peer support/peer provided services; discusses the underlying psychosocial processes of these services; and delineates the benefits to peer providers, individuals receiving services, and mental health service delivery system.
References
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Journal Article

Patterns and correlates of self-help group membership in the United States

TL;DR: This paper found that participants in self-help groups are more likely than non-participants with the same problems to by young, female, white, and unmarried, with higher levels of neuroticism, extroversion, openness to experience, and commitment to personal growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychology and self-help groups. Predictions on a partnership.

TL;DR: The authors in this article reviewed the self-help group phenomenon, its scope, characteristics, supporting social climate, and associated research issues, and a futuristic examination of its interface with the newly industrializing world of health care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychological status during recovery from an acute heart attack.

TL;DR: It is suggested that social and psychiatric intervention at an early stage might be appropriate in those patients whose psychosocial problems are at least as debilitating as their physical illness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cynical hostility and cardiovascular reactivity during self-disclosure.

TL;DR: Among subjects participating in the self‐disclosure discussion task, hostile individuals displayed significantly greater blood pressure reactivity compared with subjects low in hostility, support the psychophysiological reactivity model of hostility and health, and underscore the potential importance of social context in the psychosomatic process.
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