The challenge of fitting in: non-participation and withdrawal from an online self-help group for breast cancer patients
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/1727Date
2007-11-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Sandaunet, Anne GreteAbstract
Online self-help groups multiply peoples' possibilities to exchange information and social support. Such possibilities are expected to be of crucial value for the 'new' healthcare user. However, similar to experiences from face-to-face based groups, studies of online self-help groups report high drop-out rates. Knowledge about why this happens is scarce. By means of qualitative interviews and participant observation, this article examines non-participation and withdrawal from an online self-help group for Norwegian breast cancer patients. Five conditions are identified as barriers to use; a need to avoid painful details about cancer, not being 'ill enough' to participate, the challenge of establishing a legitimate position in the group, the organisation of everyday life and illness phases that did not motivate for self-help group participation. I suggest that an adoption of the biomedical explanation model represents an important background for this pattern, an argument which contrasts prominent assumptions about the new healthcare user who does not accept the biomedical 'restitution story' in her efforts to make sense of an illness. A further suggestion is that experiences of self-help groups as arenas for successful coping need to be further considered as a barrier to use.
Description
The article is the accepted manuscript version (final draft post refereeing). The definitive version is available at http://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01041.x
Publisher
Blackwell PublishingCitation
Sociology of Health & Illness, Volume 30 Issue 1, Pages 131 - 144Metadata
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