Factors important for the measurement of social comparison in chronic illness: a mixed-methods study
Factors important for the measurement of social comparison in chronic illness: a mixed-methods study
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to examine social comparison in illness using a mixed-methods approach that combined inductive exploration of how people used social comparison in this self-help group with a quantitative study of social comparison processes and their relationship to quality of life.
METHODS: The qualitative study involved 15 semi-structured interviews with people with Meniere's disease. Themes from the analysis of the interviews informed the development of the Social Comparison in Illness Scale (SCIS), which was then validated in a questionnaire study, in which participants with Meniere's disease (n = 196) completed the SCIS, the previously validated Identification/Contrast social comparison scale, and the SF-36 health status questionnaire.
RESULTS: The qualitative study uncovered a wide range of forms of social comparison, including upward, downward and lateral comparison on illness and coping dimensions, as well as comparing solely for informational purposes. The quantitative study indicated that these varied directions and dimensions of social comparison could be mapped onto five reliable categories that were related to quality of life: upward positive and downward positive comparison, upward negative and downward negative comparison, and comparing for information.
DISCUSSION: These analyses highlight the complexity of socially comparing in chronic illness, but also confirm the validity of the Identification/Contrast model of social comparison in this context.
chronic illness, ménière's disease, mixed methods, scale development, social comparison
219-230
Dibb, Bridget
1cdc4ce1-7f8e-4c21-80ed-c3a48cdae209
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
1 September 2006
Dibb, Bridget
1cdc4ce1-7f8e-4c21-80ed-c3a48cdae209
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Dibb, Bridget and Yardley, Lucy
(2006)
Factors important for the measurement of social comparison in chronic illness: a mixed-methods study.
Chronic Illness, 2 (3), .
(doi:10.1179/174592006X129473).
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to examine social comparison in illness using a mixed-methods approach that combined inductive exploration of how people used social comparison in this self-help group with a quantitative study of social comparison processes and their relationship to quality of life.
METHODS: The qualitative study involved 15 semi-structured interviews with people with Meniere's disease. Themes from the analysis of the interviews informed the development of the Social Comparison in Illness Scale (SCIS), which was then validated in a questionnaire study, in which participants with Meniere's disease (n = 196) completed the SCIS, the previously validated Identification/Contrast social comparison scale, and the SF-36 health status questionnaire.
RESULTS: The qualitative study uncovered a wide range of forms of social comparison, including upward, downward and lateral comparison on illness and coping dimensions, as well as comparing solely for informational purposes. The quantitative study indicated that these varied directions and dimensions of social comparison could be mapped onto five reliable categories that were related to quality of life: upward positive and downward positive comparison, upward negative and downward negative comparison, and comparing for information.
DISCUSSION: These analyses highlight the complexity of socially comparing in chronic illness, but also confirm the validity of the Identification/Contrast model of social comparison in this context.
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Published date: 1 September 2006
Keywords:
chronic illness, ménière's disease, mixed methods, scale development, social comparison
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 41813
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/41813
ISSN: 1742-3953
PURE UUID: b8922e0a-f9ad-4a84-820b-c267cbb3aadc
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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:03
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Author:
Bridget Dibb
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