#ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization

While searching the Internet for health information is now commonplace, giving and receiving medical expertise on social media platforms such as Instagram (IG) is underexplored. In order to investigate the ways in which social media platforms are a resource for seeking medical expertise, we employe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bethany Johnson, Margaret M. Quinlan, Nathan Pope
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2019-04-01
Series:Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/qrmh/article/view/7875
id doaj-31035fc5227e40f991285ef3b28c1dd3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-31035fc5227e40f991285ef3b28c1dd32020-11-25T03:54:02ZengPAGEPress PublicationsQualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare2532-20442019-04-013110.4081/qrmh.2019.7875#ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilizationBethany Johnson0Margaret M. Quinlan1Nathan Pope2Department of Communication Studies; Department of History, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NCDepartment of Communication Studies, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NCDepartment of Communication Studies, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC While searching the Internet for health information is now commonplace, giving and receiving medical expertise on social media platforms such as Instagram (IG) is underexplored. In order to investigate the ways in which social media platforms are a resource for seeking medical expertise, we employed a multimodal discourse analysis; specifically, we focused on the hashtag #ttc and the engagement of the IG community it comprised. We examined three main themes around medical expertise during treatment indexed by the hashtag: treatment protocol choices, treatment side effects and pregnancy diagnosis/confirmation. Our findings suggest that social media platforms provide a new arena in which patients can challenge medical expertise by circumventing it or adopting lay expertise instead of practitioner suggestions. We close with research implications and suggestions for further research. https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/qrmh/article/view/7875InstagramMultimodal discourse analysisImagetextInfertilitySupport groups
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bethany Johnson
Margaret M. Quinlan
Nathan Pope
spellingShingle Bethany Johnson
Margaret M. Quinlan
Nathan Pope
#ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
Instagram
Multimodal discourse analysis
Imagetext
Infertility
Support groups
author_facet Bethany Johnson
Margaret M. Quinlan
Nathan Pope
author_sort Bethany Johnson
title #ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
title_short #ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
title_full #ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
title_fullStr #ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
title_full_unstemmed #ttc on Instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
title_sort #ttc on instagram: a multimodal discourse analysis of the treatment experience of patients pursuing in vitro fertilization
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
issn 2532-2044
publishDate 2019-04-01
description While searching the Internet for health information is now commonplace, giving and receiving medical expertise on social media platforms such as Instagram (IG) is underexplored. In order to investigate the ways in which social media platforms are a resource for seeking medical expertise, we employed a multimodal discourse analysis; specifically, we focused on the hashtag #ttc and the engagement of the IG community it comprised. We examined three main themes around medical expertise during treatment indexed by the hashtag: treatment protocol choices, treatment side effects and pregnancy diagnosis/confirmation. Our findings suggest that social media platforms provide a new arena in which patients can challenge medical expertise by circumventing it or adopting lay expertise instead of practitioner suggestions. We close with research implications and suggestions for further research.
topic Instagram
Multimodal discourse analysis
Imagetext
Infertility
Support groups
url https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/qrmh/article/view/7875
work_keys_str_mv AT bethanyjohnson ttconinstagramamultimodaldiscourseanalysisofthetreatmentexperienceofpatientspursuinginvitrofertilization
AT margaretmquinlan ttconinstagramamultimodaldiscourseanalysisofthetreatmentexperienceofpatientspursuinginvitrofertilization
AT nathanpope ttconinstagramamultimodaldiscourseanalysisofthetreatmentexperienceofpatientspursuinginvitrofertilization
_version_ 1724475250032246784