Health Commodified, Health Communified: Navigating Digital Consumptionscapes of Well-Being

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Date

2017

Authors

Demirbağ Kaplan, Melike

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Emerald Group Publishing Ltd

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

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Publicly Funded

No
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Top 10%
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Top 10%

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Abstract

Purpose - Historically, research on perceptions of health either converged upon the meanings created and proposed by specialists in the healthcare industry or focused on people who have medical conditions. This approach has failed to capture how the meanings and notions of health have been evolving as medicine extends into non-medical spheres and has left gaps in the exploration of how the meanings surrounding health and well-being are constructed, negotiated and reproduced in lay discourse. This paper aims to fill this gap in the understanding of the perceptions surrounding health by investigating consumers' digitized visual accounts on social media. Design/methodology/approach - Textual network and visual content analyses of posts extracted from Instagram are used to derive conclusions on definitions of health and well-being as perceived by healthy lay individuals. Findings - Research demonstrates that digital discourse of health is clustered around four F's, namely, food, fitness, fashion and feelings, which can be categorized with respect to their degrees of representation on a commodification/communification versus bodily/spiritual well-beingmap. Originality/value - Our knowledge about the meanings of health as constructed and reflected by healthy lay people is very limited and even more so about how these meaning-making processes is realized through digital media. This paper contributes to theory by integrating consumers' meaning-making literature into health perceptions, as well as investigating the role of social networks in enabling a consumptionscape of well-being. Besides a methodological contribution of using social network analysis on textual data, this paper also provides valuable insights for policy-makers, communicators and professionals of health.

Description

Keywords

Health, Social media, Social network analysis, Lay meanings of health, Visual content analysis, Lay Theories, Illness, Medicalization, Consumer, Medicine, Care, Construction, Surveillance, Portrayal, Patient

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, 0502 economics and business, 05 social sciences

Citation

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OpenCitations Citation Count
21

Source

European Journal of Marketıng

Volume

51

Issue

11.Ara

Start Page

2054

End Page

2079
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CrossRef : 24

Scopus : 26

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Mendeley Readers : 169

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