Overweight and obese individuals who dare to talk about their excesses on closed online forums, get support and comfort from others in the same situation. Illustration photo: Thinkstock / Kolbjørn Skarpnes

Support, comfort from online weigh-loss group

Online weight loss forums protect participants from public fat shaming, and offer them a place to speak out without being confronted by normal-weight individuals, medical science or the authorities.

NTNU researcher Ingeborg Grønning has studied a diary from an online weight loss forum that is open for comments from other weight-loss forum participants.Certain types of posts receive more responses than others, she has found.

Grønning chose to analyse the diary entries of “Astrid,” a very active user on the forum.

The answers you get in weight loss forums can be divided into three categories: prospective, collective and positive. The prospective answers revolve around “if you continue in the same vein, you’ll lose weight.” Collective answers are about “we’re all struggling with the same problem,” and the positive answers are purely supportive. Illustration photo: Thinkstock

The answers you get in weight loss forums can be divided into three categories: prospective, collective and positive. The prospective answers revolve around “if you continue in the same vein, you’ll lose weight.” Collective answers are about “we’re all struggling with the same problem,” and the positive answers are purely supportive. Illustration photo: Thinkstock

“In 19 of 22 cases Astrid received positive responses when she posted confessions like, ‘I’ve been eating sweets and drinking wine for several days.’ The sociologist Erving Goffman uses the term ‘saving face,’ and from the responses it seems that the others in the forum know what it’s like to be overweight, and they step in to help her save face,” says Grønning.

Supporting each other

The results of the study have been published in Grønning’s article, “Digital absolution: Confessional interaction in an online weight loss forum,” which is part of her doctorate thesis on morbid obesity and the efforts and various processes associated with morbid obesity.

She first heard about the national Norwegian weight loss forum when she interviewed people who had undergone weight loss.

“I discovered that they used various forums to get experience-based answers to their questions from laypeople,” says Grønning.

Aksel Tjora, study co-author and NTNU professor of sociology, finds it interesting to see which posts trigger responses.

“We’re drowning in status updates and photo sharing in social media. The fact that [the number of] responses is above average when the post concerns a problem, shows that users are there to support each other, and that they hope to get support when they need it,” says Tjora.

Looking for help

By analyzing the responses, Grønning has concluded that they can be divided into three categories: prospective, collective and positive.

“The prospective, or forward-looking, answers are along the line of ‘if we continue on the same track, the weight will come off.’ Collective responses give voice to ‘we’re all struggling with the same problem,’ and the positive answers are purely supportive,” she says.

Tjora has previously studied communication in other support groups and believes the three response categories also characterize other forums.

“The categories say something about the dynamics in a self-help group, where people are basically searching for help on something they’ve done wrong or haven’t succeeded at,” he says.

Avoiding the shame

Posts on the weight loss forum that Grønning researched are open to all forum participants, who can remain anonymous. This is an important aspect since obesity continues to be a condition that is highly stigmatized.

It is important not to underestimate what happens on an online forum. Illustration photo: Thinkstock

It is important not to underestimate what happens on an online forum. Illustration photo: Thinkstock

“Lots of social stigma is attached to obesity, but on a forum you can avoid the public shaming, and can speak out without interference from people of normal weight, medical science or the authorities,” says Grønning.

“The forum is accessible regardless of where you live, and if you want you can remain anonymous. It’s a tolerant community where everyone has something in common. Patients with stigmatized illnesses like obesity use online forums extensively. It’s terrific that a forum can work that way,” she says.

She believes it is important not to underestimate what happens on an online forum.

Online forums are “very useful for those who are active. Losing weight is a long process, you have to work hard and persistently to succeed. Encouragement from others helps keep spirits up,” Grønning says.

Reference: Digital absolution. Ingeborg Grønning, Aksel Tjora. Convergence. First published date: November-28-2016. DOI: 10.1177/1354856516678558