Conducting research on the Internet:
Part 1: Addressing skepticism
When I first started using the internet as a tool for psychological research in the field of eating disorders in 2002, there was wide-spread skepticism around the viability of this approach to scientific investigation. By the time my two-year research project came to be evaluated in 2004, we still had no-where to turn in terms of an Irish academic appropriately qualified in both fields - internet research and eating disorders. Concerned about the skepticism that many academics and psychologists had ... Continue reading
Assessing the need for online
support
Should you consider an online support service? Many charities provide support and information to a specific target audience, which could include both their service users and also their service user’s wider community of family and friends. When considering how having an online support service might benefit your organisation consider the following questions: Does your organisation offer information or support? Does your organisation offer face-to-face support services? Is your target audience widely dispersed? Do you have difficulties in making your services ... Continue reading
Our new website launches
We are very proud to launch our brand spanking new website. Its the culmination of months of long hours and late nights. But its fantastic to finally get here and be able to see the website site. This is a very important first step for us, over the coming months this website will be the online home for all our wide ranging activities, and we are looking forward to filling it full of exciting and challenging content as our business grows. ... Continue reading
What are support groups and
what can they do for participants?
The terms support group, self-help group and mutual-help group all identify a similar group formation and the terms are used interchangeably. A group of this type consists of people who come together seeking and offering help and support. Participants share a common problem, and the group is usually initiated by a citizen or user (Adamsen, 2002). Participation costs its members little or nothing and the collective wisdom is born out of the shared experience of members rather than the professional ... Continue reading
A brief background to online
support
Online support groups are a popular form of support service delivery now common on the Internet. They can be in either asynchronous (e.g. newsgroups, bulletin boards) or synchronous (e.g. chat rooms) form. Surveys conducted both in the US and Ireland show that a substantial proportion of Internet users access the Internet for health reasons. In 2002, 80% of American Internet users (55% of all adults) accessed the web for health information. And in 2000, 4.9 million American Internet users participated ... Continue reading
UPR start work with Debra Ireland
We're delighted to be working closely with Debra Ireland on a really exciting project. We're implementing our online support group application, uMeet, for the well known non-profit organisation. Debra Ireland is a wonderful charity that helps people suffering from Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB), a distressing and painful genetic skin disorder. We'll be working closely with Debra Ireland over the coming months to help them setup their online service for people affected by EB in Ireland. Continue reading
Recent Entries
- Conducting research on the Internet:
Part 1: Addressing skepticism - Assessing the need for online
support - Our new website launches
- What are support groups and
what can they do for participants? - Technology based
therapeutic interventions - The stepped-care approach
- A brief background to online
support - UPR start work with Debra Ireland
- UPR launch uGive
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