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 2025;77(4):701 View
  5. Weddell J, Li E, Shi W, Gallagher R, Partridge S, Hyun K, Poulsen V, Verdicchio C, Buckley T, Redfern J. Framework for the Development and Delivery of Digital Peer Support Programs: Qualitative Study on in-Person and Digital Delivery for People With Cardiovascular Disease. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2025;27:e72743 View