社交媒体上来自COVID-19病房的患者叙述

Vitaliy L. Lekhtsier, A. Gotlib
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文介绍了对СOVID病房患者在不同疫情(2020-2021年)期间在社交媒体上进行的叙述性“报告”的实证研究结果。分析的主题是进行这些报告的动机和在社交网络上发布的患者叙述的类型。该分析基于“数字疾病风格”(通过移动互联网将患者的“疾病角色”、家庭和专业角色以及住院期间的疾病和治疗叙事结合起来)和医学社会研究中“叙事转向”代表所发展的患者叙事理论。通过网络摄影对帖子(文本和照片)进行定性分析,还考虑了网络传播语用,评论者对叙述者帖子的反应,影响患者帖子的速度和内容。该研究确定了新冠患者在网上发帖的三个动机——成为有关医院病房发生的事情的可靠、第一手人种学知识的来源,让他们的在线受众放心,并从他们那里获得情感和信息支持。该研究还确定了患者发布的三种叙事类型——“恢复叙事”、“探索叙事”、“愤怒叙事”。作为额外的发现,文章提供了对СOVID和非-СOVID患者在线叙事差异的观察,以及互联网上健康叙事交流的一些其他构成效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patient narratives from COVID-19 wards in social media
This article presents the results of an empirical study of the narrative “reports” of patients from СOVID wards, conducted by them in different waves of the pandemic (2020-2021) on social media. The subject of the analysis is the motives for conducting these reports and the typology of patients’ narratives posted on the social network. The analysis was based on the idea of a “digital sickness style” (the combination of the patient’s “sickness role”, family and professional roles and the narrative of illness and treatment while in hospital thanks to the mobile Internet) and the theory of patient storytelling developed by representatives of the “narrative turn” in medical social research. Qualitative analysis of posts (texts and photos) through a netnography optic also took into account the network communication pragmatics, commentators’ reactions to the posts of narrators, affecting the pace and content of patients’ postings. The study identified three motives for online posting by COVID ward patients - to be a source of reliable, first-hand ethnographic knowledge about what is happening in hospital wards, to reassure their online audience, and to gain emotional and informational support from them. The study also identified three types of narratives posted by patients - the “restitution narrative”, “quest narrative”, “angry narrative”. As additional findings, the article offers observations on the differences in the online narratives of СOVID and non-СOVID patients, as well as a number of other constitutive effects of health narrative exchange on the Internet.
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