What people talk about when they talk about quitting

As part of an ongoing project to explore the design of behaviour-change technology for smoking cessation, we analysed a successful community who come together on the popular Reddit website to discuss quitting and to encourage each other's quit attempts. We found that users remain anonymous but identify according to their quit stage. We examined the form and content of posts, finding that narratives about people and events are more common than other rhetorical forms. Many speak of ongoing struggles with quit attempts. Our analysis reveals forms of sociality spontaneously enacted in a self-managed community of quitters. We compare our results with earlier work on social media and behaviour change.

[1]  Peter Dalum,et al.  “After all – It doesn’t kill you to quit smoking”: An explorative analysis of the blog in a smoking cessation intervention , 2013, Scandinavian journal of public health.

[2]  M. Kreuter,et al.  Using Narrative Communication as a Tool for Health Behavior Change: A Conceptual, Theoretical, and Empirical Overview , 2007, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.

[3]  Bernd Ploderer,et al.  A Mobile App Offering Distractions and Tips to Cope With Cigarette Craving: A Qualitative Study , 2014, JMIR mHealth and uHealth.

[4]  Scott Counts,et al.  Unraveling abstinence and relapse: smoking cessation reflected in social media , 2014, CHI.

[5]  Amy Bruckman,et al.  Hollaback!: the role of storytelling online in a social movement organization , 2013, CSCW.

[6]  Rebecca E. Grinter,et al.  EatWell: sharing nutrition-related memories in a low-income community , 2008, CSCW.

[7]  Wanda Pratt,et al.  How to evaluate technologies for health behavior change in HCI research , 2011, CHI.

[8]  L. Struik,et al.  The Role of Facebook in Crush the Crave, a Mobile- and Social Media-Based Smoking Cessation Intervention: Qualitative Framework Analysis of Posts , 2014, Journal of medical Internet research.

[9]  Vincent Baujard,et al.  A qualitative analysis of an internet discussion forum for recent ex-smokers. , 2006, Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.

[10]  Debra Lauterbach,et al.  It's not that i don't have problems, i'm just not putting them on facebook: challenges and opportunities in using online social networks for health , 2011, CSCW.

[11]  Steve Howard,et al.  Patterns of support in an online community for smoking cessation , 2013, C&T '13.

[12]  Reeva Lederman,et al.  Moderated online social therapy: Designing and evaluating technology for mental health , 2014, TCHI.

[13]  J. Pennebaker,et al.  Forming a story: the health benefits of narrative. , 1999, Journal of clinical psychology.

[14]  Jennifer Preece,et al.  A multilevel analysis of sociability, usability, and community dynamics in an online health community , 2005, TCHI.

[15]  R. Kraut,et al.  Introductions and Questions: Rhetorical Strategies That Elicit Response in Online Communities , 2007 .

[16]  Phoebe Sengers,et al.  Fit4life: the design of a persuasive technology promoting healthy behavior and ideal weight , 2011, CHI.