Whose Advice is Credible? Claiming Lay Expertise in a Covid-19 Online Community

被引:0
作者
Larry Au
Gil Eyal
机构
[1] Columbia University,Department of Sociology
来源
Qualitative Sociology | 2022年 / 45卷
关键词
Uncertainty; Credibility; Lay expertise; Illness experience; Covid-19;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
During the initial months of the Covid-19 pandemic, credentialed experts—scientists, doctors, public health experts, and policymakers—as well as members of the public and patients faced radical uncertainty. Knowledge about how Covid-19 was spread, how best to diagnose the disease, and how to treat infected patients was scant and contested. Despite this radical uncertainty, however, certain users of Covid-19 Together, a large online community for those who have contracted Covid-19, were able to dispense advice to one another that was seen as credible and trustworthy. Relying on Goffman’s dramaturgical theory of social interaction, we highlight the performative dimension of claims to lay expertise to show how credibility is accrued under conditions of radical uncertainty. Drawing on four months of data from the forum, we show how credible performances of lay expertise necessitated the entangling of expert discourse with illness experience, creating a hybrid interlanguage. A credible performance of lay expertise in this setting was characterized by users' ability to switch freely between personal and scientific registers, finding and creating resonances between the two. To become a credible lay expert on this online community, users had to learn to ask questions and demonstrate a willingness to engage with biomedical knowledge while carefully generalizing their personal experience.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 61
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Whose Advice is Credible? Claiming Lay Expertise in a Covid-19 Online Community
    Au, Larry
    Eyal, Gil
    QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOGY, 2022, 45 (01) : 31 - 61
  • [2] Perception of peer advice in online health communities: Access to lay expertise
    Rueger, Jasmina
    Dolfsma, Wilfred
    Aalbers, Rick
    SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2021, 277
  • [3] Readability of online COVID-19 health information and advice
    Bould, Kathryn
    Forshaw, Mark J.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH PROMOTION AND EDUCATION, 2023, 61 (04) : 189 - 209
  • [4] Claiming Credibility in Online Comments: Popular Debate Surrounding the COVID-19 Vaccine
    Breeze, Ruth
    PUBLICATIONS, 2021, 9 (03)
  • [5] Pharmacotherapics Advice in Guidelines for COVID-19
    Chen, Zhang-Ren
    Zhou, Ying
    Liu, Jin
    Peng, Hong-Wei
    Zhou, Jian
    Zhong, Hai-Li
    Liu, Li-Li
    Lai, Ming-Fang
    Wei, Xiao-Hua
    Wen, Jin-Hua
    FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY, 2020, 11
  • [6] Dissemination through trusted credible messengers: 133 weeks of the Flint Community Webinar on COVID-19
    Uphold, Heatherlun
    Lewis, E. Yvonne
    Drahota, Amy
    Warren, Blair
    Edwards-Johnson, Jennifer
    Crawford, Mary Katherine
    Sadler, Richard
    Woolford, Susan J.
    Ellington, Roni
    Zimmerman, Marc
    Grodzinski, Alison
    Furr-Holden, C. Debra
    IMPLEMENTATION RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2025, 6
  • [7] Covid-19: a call for mobilizing geriatric expertise
    Shane O’Hanlon
    Jugdeep Dhesi
    Louise Aronson
    Sharon K. Inouye
    European Geriatric Medicine, 2021, 12 : 597 - 600
  • [8] Covid-19: a call for mobilizing geriatric expertise
    O'Hanlon, Shane
    Dhesi, Jugdeep
    Aronson, Louise
    Inouye, Sharon K.
    EUROPEAN GERIATRIC MEDICINE, 2021, 12 (03) : 597 - 600
  • [9] Editorial: The politics of expertise: Understanding interactions between policy advice, government, and outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Ahmadov, Anar
    Alexiadou, Despina
    Cho, Min
    Makszin, Kristin
    FRONTIERS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2022, 4
  • [10] Bidding Better Online in Belgium: The Value of Auction House Expertise during the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Kalbermatten, Syra
    Rausch, Christoph
    ARTS, 2021, 10 (04)