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Digital Health Communications


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medical knowledge. As a result, new digital healthcare professions are emerging, using the Internet to create communities of patients led either by healthcare professionals switching to community management or by community managers trained in the specificities, particularly ethical, of digital communication in health [GAL 14].

      As a result, between understanding the uses, non-uses and misuses of ICT in the workplace, support for the managerial rationalization of healthcare teams and new professionalization, research into digital communications in healthcare organizations provides an original insight into the challenges of the sector. However, thinking about persuasive digital communication produced by healthcare organizations and professionals cannot be limited to communication at work.

      Emerging approaches are also questioning the communication strategies implemented by institutions, independently of the communication of prevention authorities. In an info-communication environment marked by a form of mistrust, or even distrust, of the institutional discourse [PAR 15], this is a question of providing the clearest possible information to make the patient a (convinced) stakeholder in the quality of care. Although this information is massively transmitted via the Internet, public hospitals, particularly in France, are constrained by data security standards not to develop the “communication” function in organizational charts. This results in the dissemination of very practical, not to say administrative, top-down information, which cannot compete with participative and collaborative general public health information systems, such as Doctissimo. This strategic approach to communication in public health establishments [AMB 18] highlights the role of the Internet in the construction of true “hospital brands” [MED 11]. At the edge of the digital communication of organizations, this is indeed a more rooted form of digital public health communication.

      “the other” is not an enigma to be deciphered or discovered, but a stranger who must be convinced so that he will modify or change his attitude. [REN 07]

      The same applies to the work of the ComSanté team, which is continuing and diversifying this approach [KIV 09]. This research resonates with other works that highlight attempts at the dialogical adaptation of health institutions, particularly in the face of health crises. In the context of the massification of SICDs specific to the collaborative Web, the controversies arising from these crises are deployed in digital public debate arenas in which the biomedical voice is challenged [OLL 15], or at least discussed, either by Internet users with no particular knowledge of the disease other than experiential knowledge, or by citizens who want to make their voices heard, often critical and discordant, on crisis management.

      Digital public health communication continues to be in tension between the strategies of institutional, political and industrial actors and the more informative and community-based logics aimed at emancipating all citizens through knowledge and reasoned and reasonable discussion. Public authorities are forced to completely review their communication policies, giving priority to participatory mechanisms in order to play an active role in a health public space [PAI 07], which must nevertheless be controlled. It is therefore a question for ICS researchers to understand the new modalities of a strategic communication called 2.0 which, under the guise of a health democracy aiming at the participation of all in the improvement of health care, would seek to better orient exchanges in a logic oscillating between political communication and therapeutic education [ROM 10].

      this attitude differs from passive obedience, an attitude usually attributed to the patient and generally expected in “classic” models of healthcare management. This is the case with the professional model of compliance, which remains widespread in modern healthcare systems. [LEM 09]

      However, not all citizens, potential users of health care, are equally equipped to deal with a digital divide that may, in the long term, create real health information disparities. Indeed, as Joëlle Kivits and Sophie Gendarme point out, access to health information no longer seems to be an economic or technological issue, but a question of health literacy, that is, the ability to

      understand media content (Rootman, Gordon-El-Bihbety, 2008), an ability that is more important for people with higher levels of education. In this sense, it is a marker of inequality in terms of Internet use, and more generally in terms of health. [KIV 15]

      The massification of digital tools is therefore profoundly modifying the informational and communicational practices of patients and their caregivers. These practices seem to be deeply emotional, on the one hand, because of the need to be informed about our pathology or that of a loved one, to better understand the treatment and its side effects, and to grasp the issues at stake in terms of duration or hospital/outpatient care and, on the other hand, because of the need to share our experience and benefit from that of others in the face of a disease.

      Work on online patient information modalities is still relevant, systematically reactivating the analysis of tensions and struggles for recognition between knowledge from the experience of care and knowledge from scientific and academic institutions. This is how Viviane Clavier highlights a form of unpreparedness on the part of healthcare professionals in the face of general questions related to current events asked by patients, which lead the specialist into non-specific answers for which she or he will have a form of natural distrust [CLA 19]. This is why health information is consulted, discussed, shared and produced by patients who are concerned about better understanding of the disease, its treatment and, above all, how daily life will be organized around it in the future. Marc Lemire encourages the academic community to consider with great interest this “heterodox knowledge” that resonates or competes with “biomedical knowledge” [LEM 09]. So-called lay knowledge, although it can compete with institutionalized biomedical hegemony in the context of a rebalanced patient–professional care relationship [ACK 10], nonetheless remains a fully-fledged informational and emotional resource for patients. As noted by Pierre Mignot and Dorsaf Omrane in their study of a digital breast cancer prevention dispositive, it is necessary to underline “the persuasive power of ‘knowledge from experience’ in the spaces of online exchanges between the people concerned” [MIG 18].