Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community

Abstract BackgroundOnline health communities (OHCs) enable patients to create social ties with people with similar health conditions outside their existing social networks. Harnessing mechanisms of information diffusion in OHCs has attracted attention for its ability to improv...

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Main Authors: Sara Khoshnaw, Pietro Panzarasa, Anna De Simoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2024-12-01
Series:JMIR Cardio
Online Access:https://cardio.jmir.org/2024/1/e53696
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author Sara Khoshnaw
Pietro Panzarasa
Anna De Simoni
author_facet Sara Khoshnaw
Pietro Panzarasa
Anna De Simoni
author_sort Sara Khoshnaw
collection DOAJ
description Abstract BackgroundOnline health communities (OHCs) enable patients to create social ties with people with similar health conditions outside their existing social networks. Harnessing mechanisms of information diffusion in OHCs has attracted attention for its ability to improve illness self-management without the use of health care resources. ObjectiveWe aimed to analyze the novelty of a metaphor used for the first time in an OHC, assess how it can facilitate self-management of post-stroke symptoms, describe its appearance over time, and classify its diffusion mechanisms. MethodsWe conducted a passive analysis of posts written by UK stroke survivors and their family members in an online stroke community between 2004 and 2011. Posts including the term “legacy of stroke” were identified. Information diffusion was classified according to self-promotion or viral spread mechanisms and diffusion depth (the number of users the information spreads out to). Linguistic analysis was performed through the British National Corpus and the Google search engine. ResultsPost-stroke symptoms were referred to as “legacy of stroke.” This metaphor was novel and appeared for the first time in the OHC in the second out of a total of 3459 threads. The metaphor was written by user A, who attributed it to a stroke consultant explaining post-stroke fatigue. This user was a “superuser” (ie, a user with high posting activity) and self-promoted the metaphor throughout the years in response to posts written by other users, in 51 separate threads. In total, 7 users subsequently used the metaphor, contributing to its viral diffusion, of which 3 were superusers themselves. Superusers achieved the higher diffusion depths (maximum of 3). Of the 7 users, 3 had been part of threads where user A mentioned the metaphor, while 2 users had been part of discussion threads in unrelated conversations. In total, 2 users had not been part of threads with any of the other users, suggesting that the metaphor was acquired through prior lurking activity. ConclusionsMetaphors that are considered helpful by patients with stroke to come to terms with their symptoms can diffuse in OHCs through both self-promotion and social (or viral) spreading, with the main driver of diffusion being the superuser trait. Lurking activity (the most common behavior in OHCs) contributed to the diffusion of information. As an increasing number of patients with long-term conditions join OHCs to find others with similar health-related concerns, improving clinicians’ and researchers’ awareness of the diffusion of metaphors that facilitate self-management in health social media may be beneficial beyond the individual patient.
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spelling doaj-art-e558b3e46bd14603a5d0cebe90129ce22024-12-30T11:52:11ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Cardio2561-10112024-12-018e53696e5369610.2196/53696Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health CommunitySara Khoshnawhttp://orcid.org/0009-0008-9001-1227Pietro Panzarasahttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-7596-4806Anna De Simonihttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-6955-0885 Abstract BackgroundOnline health communities (OHCs) enable patients to create social ties with people with similar health conditions outside their existing social networks. Harnessing mechanisms of information diffusion in OHCs has attracted attention for its ability to improve illness self-management without the use of health care resources. ObjectiveWe aimed to analyze the novelty of a metaphor used for the first time in an OHC, assess how it can facilitate self-management of post-stroke symptoms, describe its appearance over time, and classify its diffusion mechanisms. MethodsWe conducted a passive analysis of posts written by UK stroke survivors and their family members in an online stroke community between 2004 and 2011. Posts including the term “legacy of stroke” were identified. Information diffusion was classified according to self-promotion or viral spread mechanisms and diffusion depth (the number of users the information spreads out to). Linguistic analysis was performed through the British National Corpus and the Google search engine. ResultsPost-stroke symptoms were referred to as “legacy of stroke.” This metaphor was novel and appeared for the first time in the OHC in the second out of a total of 3459 threads. The metaphor was written by user A, who attributed it to a stroke consultant explaining post-stroke fatigue. This user was a “superuser” (ie, a user with high posting activity) and self-promoted the metaphor throughout the years in response to posts written by other users, in 51 separate threads. In total, 7 users subsequently used the metaphor, contributing to its viral diffusion, of which 3 were superusers themselves. Superusers achieved the higher diffusion depths (maximum of 3). Of the 7 users, 3 had been part of threads where user A mentioned the metaphor, while 2 users had been part of discussion threads in unrelated conversations. In total, 2 users had not been part of threads with any of the other users, suggesting that the metaphor was acquired through prior lurking activity. ConclusionsMetaphors that are considered helpful by patients with stroke to come to terms with their symptoms can diffuse in OHCs through both self-promotion and social (or viral) spreading, with the main driver of diffusion being the superuser trait. Lurking activity (the most common behavior in OHCs) contributed to the diffusion of information. As an increasing number of patients with long-term conditions join OHCs to find others with similar health-related concerns, improving clinicians’ and researchers’ awareness of the diffusion of metaphors that facilitate self-management in health social media may be beneficial beyond the individual patient.https://cardio.jmir.org/2024/1/e53696
spellingShingle Sara Khoshnaw
Pietro Panzarasa
Anna De Simoni
Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community
JMIR Cardio
title Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community
title_full Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community
title_fullStr Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community
title_full_unstemmed Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community
title_short Metaphor Diffusion in Online Health Communities: Infodemiology Study in a Stroke Online Health Community
title_sort metaphor diffusion in online health communities infodemiology study in a stroke online health community
url https://cardio.jmir.org/2024/1/e53696
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