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Use of an Online Forum for Relatives of People With Psychosis and Bipolar Disorder: Mixed Methods Study: Mixed Methods Study

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Use of an Online Forum for Relatives of People With Psychosis and Bipolar Disorder: Mixed Methods Study: Mixed Methods Study. / Jones, Steven; Atanasova, Dimitrinka; Dodd, Susanna et al.
In: JMIR Mental Health, Vol. 9, No. 10, e35837, 20.10.2022.

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@article{d5636aa1530f4923b65920bd2a2af9f9,
title = "Use of an Online Forum for Relatives of People With Psychosis and Bipolar Disorder: Mixed Methods Study: Mixed Methods Study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Relatives of people with psychosis or bipolar disorder experience high levels of distress but are typically not offered the support they need. Online peer forums may offer a solution, but knowledge about who uses them, how, and why is limited. This study reported on online forum use during the Relatives Education and Coping Toolkit (REACT) trial.OBJECTIVE: We aimed to report who used the forum and why; how sociodemographic factors are associated with participation; the relationship among frequency, type of use, and outcomes; and how the forum was used.METHODS: The relationships between key sociodemographic characteristics, levels of forum use, and distress were statistically analyzed. We used thematic and semantic analyses to understand the reasons for relatives joining the forum and the key topics initiated by them. We also used the University Centre for Computer Corpus Research on Language Semantic Analysis System to compare how relatives and REACT supporters (moderators) used the forum.RESULTS: A total of 348 participants with full forum use data from REACT were included in this study. The forum was accessed by 59.4% (207/348) of the relatives across the entire age range, with no significant associations between sociodemographic factors and forum participation, or between level or type of use and relatives' distress levels. Relatives joined the forum primarily to find people in similar circumstances, express concerns, and talk about stressful events. Relatives were most concerned about recent events, negative emotions linked to caring, experiences of conflict or threat, and concerns about suicide. These posts underscored both the challenges the relatives were facing and the fact that they felt safe sharing them in this context.CONCLUSIONS: Although only a proportion of REACT participants engaged actively with its forum, they were widely distributed across age and other sociodemographic groupings. Relatives used the forum for information, support, and guidance and to offer detailed information about their experiences. The topics raised highlighted the burden carried by relatives and the potential value of easy-access, moderated, peer-supported forums in helping relatives to manage the challenges they faced.",
keywords = "psychosis, bipolar disorder, relative, carer, mental health, forum, online, digital health, Relatives Education and Coping Toolkit, REACT, trial",
author = "Steven Jones and Dimitrinka Atanasova and Susanna Dodd and Susan Flowers and Anna Rosala-Hallas and Heather Robinson and Elena Semino and Fiona Lobban",
year = "2022",
month = oct,
day = "20",
doi = "10.2196/35837",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "JMIR Mental Health",
issn = "2368-7959",
publisher = "JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Use of an Online Forum for Relatives of People With Psychosis and Bipolar Disorder: Mixed Methods Study

T2 - Mixed Methods Study

AU - Jones, Steven

AU - Atanasova, Dimitrinka

AU - Dodd, Susanna

AU - Flowers, Susan

AU - Rosala-Hallas, Anna

AU - Robinson, Heather

AU - Semino, Elena

AU - Lobban, Fiona

PY - 2022/10/20

Y1 - 2022/10/20

N2 - BACKGROUND: Relatives of people with psychosis or bipolar disorder experience high levels of distress but are typically not offered the support they need. Online peer forums may offer a solution, but knowledge about who uses them, how, and why is limited. This study reported on online forum use during the Relatives Education and Coping Toolkit (REACT) trial.OBJECTIVE: We aimed to report who used the forum and why; how sociodemographic factors are associated with participation; the relationship among frequency, type of use, and outcomes; and how the forum was used.METHODS: The relationships between key sociodemographic characteristics, levels of forum use, and distress were statistically analyzed. We used thematic and semantic analyses to understand the reasons for relatives joining the forum and the key topics initiated by them. We also used the University Centre for Computer Corpus Research on Language Semantic Analysis System to compare how relatives and REACT supporters (moderators) used the forum.RESULTS: A total of 348 participants with full forum use data from REACT were included in this study. The forum was accessed by 59.4% (207/348) of the relatives across the entire age range, with no significant associations between sociodemographic factors and forum participation, or between level or type of use and relatives' distress levels. Relatives joined the forum primarily to find people in similar circumstances, express concerns, and talk about stressful events. Relatives were most concerned about recent events, negative emotions linked to caring, experiences of conflict or threat, and concerns about suicide. These posts underscored both the challenges the relatives were facing and the fact that they felt safe sharing them in this context.CONCLUSIONS: Although only a proportion of REACT participants engaged actively with its forum, they were widely distributed across age and other sociodemographic groupings. Relatives used the forum for information, support, and guidance and to offer detailed information about their experiences. The topics raised highlighted the burden carried by relatives and the potential value of easy-access, moderated, peer-supported forums in helping relatives to manage the challenges they faced.

AB - BACKGROUND: Relatives of people with psychosis or bipolar disorder experience high levels of distress but are typically not offered the support they need. Online peer forums may offer a solution, but knowledge about who uses them, how, and why is limited. This study reported on online forum use during the Relatives Education and Coping Toolkit (REACT) trial.OBJECTIVE: We aimed to report who used the forum and why; how sociodemographic factors are associated with participation; the relationship among frequency, type of use, and outcomes; and how the forum was used.METHODS: The relationships between key sociodemographic characteristics, levels of forum use, and distress were statistically analyzed. We used thematic and semantic analyses to understand the reasons for relatives joining the forum and the key topics initiated by them. We also used the University Centre for Computer Corpus Research on Language Semantic Analysis System to compare how relatives and REACT supporters (moderators) used the forum.RESULTS: A total of 348 participants with full forum use data from REACT were included in this study. The forum was accessed by 59.4% (207/348) of the relatives across the entire age range, with no significant associations between sociodemographic factors and forum participation, or between level or type of use and relatives' distress levels. Relatives joined the forum primarily to find people in similar circumstances, express concerns, and talk about stressful events. Relatives were most concerned about recent events, negative emotions linked to caring, experiences of conflict or threat, and concerns about suicide. These posts underscored both the challenges the relatives were facing and the fact that they felt safe sharing them in this context.CONCLUSIONS: Although only a proportion of REACT participants engaged actively with its forum, they were widely distributed across age and other sociodemographic groupings. Relatives used the forum for information, support, and guidance and to offer detailed information about their experiences. The topics raised highlighted the burden carried by relatives and the potential value of easy-access, moderated, peer-supported forums in helping relatives to manage the challenges they faced.

KW - psychosis

KW - bipolar disorder

KW - relative

KW - carer

KW - mental health

KW - forum

KW - online

KW - digital health

KW - Relatives Education and Coping Toolkit

KW - REACT

KW - trial

U2 - 10.2196/35837

DO - 10.2196/35837

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36264621

VL - 9

JO - JMIR Mental Health

JF - JMIR Mental Health

SN - 2368-7959

IS - 10

M1 - e35837

ER -