Thematics articles – Solidarity in question – the ambivalences of helping interactions in late modern Hungary

Peer support instead of community solidarity among people with psychiatric diagnosis: Examining an online, anonymous self-help website

Published:
December 31, 2023
Authors
View
Keywords
License

Copyright (c) 2023 CROSS-SECTIONS - Social Science Journal

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

A CC BY licence alkalmazása előtt megjelent cikkek esetében (2020 előtt) továbbra is a CC BY-NC-ND licence az érvényes.

How To Cite
Selected Style: APA
Bányai, B., & Légmán, A. (2023). Peer support instead of community solidarity among people with psychiatric diagnosis: Examining an online, anonymous self-help website. CROSS-SECTIONS - Social Science Journal, 12(4), 10-33. https://doi.org/10.18392/metsz/2023/4/2
Abstract

In our research, we examined the first social networking website in Hungary that was specifically and explicitly designed for people with mental health problems and their relatives, or for people interested in the topic. A unique feature is that in 2021, it will still be possible to register anonymously and post comments on the site. Our research explores the life situations of people diagnosed as psychiatrically ill based on the concept of the recovery model, and therefore a central question for us is how an online self-help, peer support group can contribute to the recovery of individuals. In addition, one of the main hypotheses of our research is that community solidarity towards people with a psychiatric diagnosis is very low at different levels of society, and therefore self-help and peer support, also provided by the site we are investigating, may be of particular importance for the people concerned. We assume that they are a group that is highly stigmatised and socially rejected. In the media they are typically either invisible or portrayed as violent, aggressive figures. The Covid19 epidemic situation has led to many people experiencing psychological difficulties because of quarantine or the long-term side effects of the virus itself, which have been thematised in the media, but we believe that the mechanisms of solidarity with those diagnosed as psychiatric patients have not fundamentally changed (see for example the first establishment of psychiatric hospital wards