Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions

This study investigates how a pharmaceutical company’s responses to patients’ complaints regarding side effects affect social media users’ evaluation of a paracrisis situation. An online study was conducted by simulating a real-world paracrisis situation in which patients petitioned about the seriou...

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Main Authors: Sang Lee, Samar Ben Romdhane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2025.1564650/full
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author Sang Lee
Samar Ben Romdhane
author_facet Sang Lee
Samar Ben Romdhane
author_sort Sang Lee
collection DOAJ
description This study investigates how a pharmaceutical company’s responses to patients’ complaints regarding side effects affect social media users’ evaluation of a paracrisis situation. An online study was conducted by simulating a real-world paracrisis situation in which patients petitioned about the serious side effects of a drug on the pharmaceutical company’s Facebook page. Results showed that users who are actively engaged with social media reacted more positively when the pharmaceutical company proactively responded to a paracrisis situation. In particular, user engagement moderated the effects of company engagement on perceived crisis likelihood. In turn, perceived crisis likelihood mediated the interaction effects on users’ intention to spread negative eWOM and purchase intentions. Thus, this study highlights the importance of proactive engagement by demonstrating the mitigating effects of precrisis engagement when an organization faces a potential crisis situation on social media. It adds theoretical implications to crisis communication literature and provides practical implications as to how online negative events might be managed to minimize negative consequences.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2297-900X
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publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
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spelling doaj-art-d305b1c46a0442e3b0304c532cde9db42025-08-20T03:52:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Communication2297-900X2025-05-011010.3389/fcomm.2025.15646501564650Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptionsSang LeeSamar Ben RomdhaneThis study investigates how a pharmaceutical company’s responses to patients’ complaints regarding side effects affect social media users’ evaluation of a paracrisis situation. An online study was conducted by simulating a real-world paracrisis situation in which patients petitioned about the serious side effects of a drug on the pharmaceutical company’s Facebook page. Results showed that users who are actively engaged with social media reacted more positively when the pharmaceutical company proactively responded to a paracrisis situation. In particular, user engagement moderated the effects of company engagement on perceived crisis likelihood. In turn, perceived crisis likelihood mediated the interaction effects on users’ intention to spread negative eWOM and purchase intentions. Thus, this study highlights the importance of proactive engagement by demonstrating the mitigating effects of precrisis engagement when an organization faces a potential crisis situation on social media. It adds theoretical implications to crisis communication literature and provides practical implications as to how online negative events might be managed to minimize negative consequences.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2025.1564650/fullonline engagementparacrisisside-effect complaintsmoderated mediationcrisis communication
spellingShingle Sang Lee
Samar Ben Romdhane
Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions
Frontiers in Communication
online engagement
paracrisis
side-effect complaints
moderated mediation
crisis communication
title Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions
title_full Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions
title_fullStr Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions
title_full_unstemmed Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions
title_short Digital crisis management: how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users’ perceptions
title_sort digital crisis management how proactive online engagements on patient complaints influence social media users perceptions
topic online engagement
paracrisis
side-effect complaints
moderated mediation
crisis communication
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2025.1564650/full
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AT samarbenromdhane digitalcrisismanagementhowproactiveonlineengagementsonpatientcomplaintsinfluencesocialmediausersperceptions