Published on in Vol 2, No 2 (2019): Jul-Dec

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/10857, first published .
Perceptions of the Diabetes Online Community’s Credibility, Social Capital, and Help and Harm: Cross-Sectional Comparison Between Baby Boomers and Younger Adults

Perceptions of the Diabetes Online Community’s Credibility, Social Capital, and Help and Harm: Cross-Sectional Comparison Between Baby Boomers and Younger Adults

Perceptions of the Diabetes Online Community’s Credibility, Social Capital, and Help and Harm: Cross-Sectional Comparison Between Baby Boomers and Younger Adults

Authors of this article:

Michelle L Litchman1 Author Orcid Image ;   Linda S Edelman1 Author Orcid Image

Journals

  1. Elnaggar A, Ta Park V, Lee S, Bender M, Siegmund L, Park L. Patients’ Use of Social Media for Diabetes Self-Care: Systematic Review. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2020;22(4):e14209 View
  2. Aghdam A, Watson J, Miah S, Cliff C. A novel information sharing framework for people living with type-2 diabetes in the context of a group education program. Health Information Science and Systems 2021;9(1) View
  3. McLarney M, Litchman M, Greenwood D, Drincic A. Navigating Diabetes Online Communities in Clinical Practice. Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology 2022;16(4):874 View
  4. Zhao Y, Zhang L, Zeng C, Chen Y, Lu W, Song N. Factors influencing online health information credibility: a meta-analysis. Aslib Journal of Information Management 2024 View