‘In my experience …’: The use of the word experience in peer online forums for mental health
Anna Lindroos Cermakova, Elena Semino, Karin Tusting, Neil Caton, Matthew Coole, Zoe Glossop, Steven Jones, Christopher Lodge, Paul Marshall, Tamara Rakic, Paul Rayson, Heather Robinson, John Vidler, Fiona Lobban

TL;DR
This study explores how people share and respond to personal mental health experiences in online forums, finding that such sharing is generally helpful and supportive.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the linguistic patterns of experience-sharing in mental health forums and their positive impacts.
Findings
Forum contributors often share treatment information and advise others to seek help.
Responses to others' experiences typically include gratitude and reciprocal sharing.
Participants occasionally report feeling less alone after reading others' experiences.
Abstract
Peer support online forums potentially offer accessible and inexpensive access to information and support through shared lived experience, including in relation to mental health. However, the impacts of participating in online communities are not fully understood. The present study takes a linguistic perspective to investigating how references to personal lived experience are (1) used, that is, how forum contributors present their experience and (2) responded to, that is, how forum contributors react to experience of others. The study employs the methods of corpus-based discourse analysis using data from two mental health forums. The study design and results have been conducted in consultation with a PPI group. When sharing what they call their experience, forum contributors typically give advice and/or provide information for the benefit of others. The most frequent information type…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media in Health Education · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility · Misinformation and Its Impacts
