Health activism and the logic of connective action. A case study of rare disease patient organisations. Vicari, S. & Cappai, F. Information, Communication and Society, 19(11):1653–1671, November, 2016.
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This exploratory work investigates the role of digital media in expanding health discourse practices in a way to transform traditional structures of agency in public health. By focusing on a sample of rare disease patient organisations as representative of contemporary health activism, this study investigates the role of digital communication in the development of (1) bottom-up sharing and co-production of health knowledge, (2) health public engagement dynamics and (3) health information pathways. Findings show that digital media affordances for patient organisations go beyond the provision of social support for patient communities; they ease one-way, two-way and crowdsourced processes of health knowledge sharing, exchange and co-production, provide personalised routes to health public engagement and bolster the emergence of varied pathways to health information where experiential knowledge and medical authority are equally valued. These forms of organisationally enabled connective action can help the surfacing of personal narratives that strengthen patient communities, the bottom-up production of health knowledge relevant to a wider public and the development of an informational and eventually cultural context that eases patients' political action.
@article{vicari_health_2016,
	title = {Health activism and the logic of connective action. {A} case study of rare disease patient organisations},
	volume = {19},
	issn = {1369-118X},
	doi = {10.1080/1369118X.2016.1154587},
	abstract = {This exploratory work investigates the role of digital media in expanding health discourse practices in a way to transform traditional structures of agency in public health. By focusing on a sample of rare disease patient organisations as representative of contemporary health activism, this study investigates the role of digital communication in the development of (1) bottom-up sharing and co-production of health knowledge, (2) health public engagement dynamics and (3) health information pathways. Findings show that digital media affordances for patient organisations go beyond the provision of social support for patient communities; they ease one-way, two-way and crowdsourced processes of health knowledge sharing, exchange and co-production, provide personalised routes to health public engagement and bolster the emergence of varied pathways to health information where experiential knowledge and medical authority are equally valued. These forms of organisationally enabled connective action can help the surfacing of personal narratives that strengthen patient communities, the bottom-up production of health knowledge relevant to a wider public and the development of an informational and eventually cultural context that eases patients' political action.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {11},
	journal = {Information, Communication and Society},
	author = {Vicari, Stefania and Cappai, Franco},
	month = nov,
	year = {2016},
	pmid = {27499676},
	pmcid = {PMC4959124},
	keywords = {Health activism, ICTs, connective action, patients},
	pages = {1653--1671}
}

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