Online Health Research and Health Anxiety: A Systematic Review and Conceptual Integration

Richard Brown, Niamh Skelly, Carolyn Chew-Graham

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Abstract

Using the Internet to obtain health information (“online health research”, OHR) is commonplace. This paper provides a systematic narrative review of evidence concerning the relationship between OHR and health anxiety. We conclude that health anxiety is associated with more frequent self-reported OHR, heightened distress after OHR, and increased doctor visits post-OHR. Evidence suggests that OHR often has a reassurance seeking function and can relieve anxiety, but that it can also cause alarm and become a distressing, compulsive behaviour. We present a novel model that integrates these perspectives and existing research within a single explanatory framework that distinguishes between problematic OHR and compulsive OHR and describes the role of positive and negative metacognitions in their respective development.
Original languageEnglish
JournalClinical Psychology: Science and Practice
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Jul 2019

Keywords

  • cyberchondria
  • health anxiety
  • hypochondriasis
  • Internet
  • reassurance
  • online health research

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