Publication | Closed Access
Self-help On-line: An Outcome Evaluation of Breast Cancer Bulletin Boards
141
Citations
20
References
2005
Year
Mental HealthDigital InterventionCancer Bulletin BoardsSelf-care InterventionCancer EducationBreast Cancer PatientsHealth CommunicationDigital HealthPatient-reported OutcomePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchOutcome EvaluationCancer LiteracyHealth PolicyPsychiatryInternet Bulletin BoardsPatient SupportDepressionOutcomes ResearchNursingPalliative CareBreast CancerMedicineHealth Informatics
Many breast cancer patients find help from on-line self-help groups, consisting of self-directed, asynchronous, bulletin boards. These have yet to be empirically evaluated. Upon joining a group and 6 months later, new members (N=114) to breast cancer bulletin boards completed measures of depression (CES-D), growth (PTGI) and psychosocial wellbeing (FACT-B). Improvement was statistically significant on all three measures. This serves as a first validation of Internet bulletin boards as a source of support and help for breast cancer patients. These boards are of particular interest because they are free, accessible and support comes from peers and not from professional facilitators.
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