Do online communities change power processes in healthcare? Using case studies to examine the use of online health communities by patients with Parkinson's disease
Publication year
2016Source
BMJ Open, 6, 11, (2016), pp. e012110, article e012110ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Personeelsmanagement
Methoden
Marketing
Neurology
Journal title
BMJ Open
Volume
vol. 6
Issue
iss. 11
Page start
p. e012110
Page end
p. e012110
Subject
Institute for Management Research; Radboudumc 3: Disorders of movement DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
- OBJECTIVE: Communication technologies, such as personal online health communities, are increasingly considered as a tool to realise patient empowerment. However, little is known about the actual use of online health communities. Here, we investigated if and how patients' use of online communities supports patient empowerment.
- SETTING: A network of primary and secondary care providers around individual patients with Parkinson's disease.
- PARTICIPANTS: We conducted case studies to examine our research question. We interviewed 18 patients with Parkinson's disease and observed the use of online health communities of 14 of them for an average of 1 year.
- PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURES: We analysed the interviews and the online conversations between patients and healthcare providers, using Foucault's framework for studying power processes.
- RESULTS: We observed that patient empowerment is inhibited by implicit norms that exist within these communities around the number and content of postings. First, patients refrained from asking too many questions of their healthcare providers, but felt obliged to offer them regular updates. Second, patients scrutinised the content of their postings, being afraid to come across as complainers. Third, patients were cautious in making knowledge claims about their disease.
- CONCLUSIONS: Changing implicit norms within online communities and the societal context they exist in seems necessary to achieve greater patient empowerment. Possibilities for changing these norms might lie in open dialogue between patient and healthcare providers about expectations, revising the curriculum of medical education and redesigning personal online health communities to support two-way knowledge exchange.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [234108]
- Electronic publications [116863]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [89175]
- Nijmegen School of Management [18202]
- Open Access publications [83955]
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