Is blogging good for your health? 

Joanna Moorhead 

For many people with serious illnesses, blogging offers a way to cope and share 
their stories. 

Ian Spratley wrote an online diary throughout his illness with advanced bowel 
cancer and believes it was as crucial as the chemotherapy and surgery were
to seeing him through. "There were some very bleak times - at one point I was 
given a less than 50 per cent chance of survival," he says. "I had amazing
support from my partner and my family and friends, but reasoning my situation 
out through a blog was the best way of dealing with it for me." 

More and more people are turning to the internet in the wake of a diagnosis of 
serious illness. It tends to be the bloggers who die who make it into the
press - such as 26-year-old Adrian Sudbury, who died of leukaemia last month 
(AUG) after documenting his battle with the illness at 
baldyblog.freshblogs.co.uk
- although many others are chronicling their conditions through to recovery. 
Spratley says that the experience of recording his journey through diagnosis,
surgery, hospital stays and ileostomy bags (for faeces) was not only "hugely 
cathartic" but it felt healing, too. "At times," he says, "I felt my cancer
was leaving with each word I wrote. I was amazed at how much it helped me to 
deal with the issues, and how much better it made me feel." 

Kevin Leitch, 38, blogs on his battle with manic depression, which he was 
diagnosed with as a teenager. "It feels like all the stuff that's been swirling
round my head since I was a kid can come out in my blog," he says. "It's giving 
me a way to categorise and articulate and work through my experiences.
I don't feel any better about what I've been through, but I do feel I can look 
back and understand what was happening to me. It's helped me make sense
of things." 

Feelgood factor 

You could argue that these sentiments apply just as much to personal 
diary-writing as to online blogging: so why go public? The answer, for many, is 
that
there is a feelgood factor in passing on information to readers around the 
world who may be suffering from the same condition. "Even if you only get one
or two comments, it's uplifting to feel you've been able to help someone," says 
Leitch. "I got a message from someone the other day who said his partner
had manic depression, and he'd never been able to understand what she was going 
through until he read my blog. It gave him insights into her state of mind,
and that helped them both." Becky (who doesn't want to disclose her surname) 
blogs as "R.Gyle" about being an asthma sufferer and says it makes her day
when someone writes to tell her that she has made them chuckle. "Life with 
severe asthma is a struggle, and you have to keep a sense of humour or you go
under," she says. "I like to share that with people." 

Blogging also provides a chance to tell it like it is, smashing the taboos 
around the nitty gritty of serious illness. Spratley, for example, spared his
readers no details in his meticulous accounts of how he coped with a constantly 
leaking ileostomy bag. It's stomach-churningly honest and so it should
be, he says, because it lets others know the reality of your situation while 
reassuring those who might be in the same boat. "All too often you feel you're
the only person who's going through this frustrating time," he says. "And then 
you get a message from someone in exactly the same position - and what's
more they say here are a few ideas that helped me, and might help you." 

Risks in blogging 

Are there any risks in blogging your way through ill-health? Disclosure is one: 
Leitch used to blog on an open site, but switched to a password-only forum
after worrying about exposing his history to would-be employers. "I've got 
three children and I need to work," he says. "These days when you go for an
interview you know the employer has probably searched for your name on the 
internet. It made me aware that you're giving away a lot of detail about your
life that you might not want someone, down the line, to know." 

Becky, the asthma blogger, has similar concerns. "I don't want to be unable to 
say what I feel on a blog because I know the medical staff where I'm being
treated could read it and see everything I'm saying," she says. "Anonymity is 
safer." 

Others worry about the effect of blogs on readers, especially those suffering 
from the same or a similar medical condition. "Things in print have a kind
of authority," says Dr. Kat Arney of Cancer Research U.K. "My concern is that 
you get one person using a new drug, it seems to be working for them and
they start writing about it - and that makes other people want it, even though 
it isn't yet tested. Swapping experiences on the internet is no substitute
for proper scientific trials."

Illness blogs can also make heartbreaking reading, such as that of Louise 
Snape, a 30-year-old from Manchester, who was diagnosed with the potentially 
fatal
heart disease, dilated cardiomyopathy, after her newborn twin girls were found 
to have the condition. "Finding yourself in a situation like this is totally
unbelievable," she says. "You can't imagine anything worse. The girls, Katie 
and Lauren, are three. Katie has had a heart transplant and Lauren and I are
being assessed for them. 

"Writing my blog keeps me sane. I think that without it I'd go mad. I can't get 
out much because I'm not strong enough. I can't even take the girls to the
park. Doing this gives me something to focus on when they're in bed and I've 
finally got a few minutes to myself. And we do get lots of feedback from all
over the world. People who read my blog really do care about me and the girls. 
I can't put into words what a difference that makes to my life." - © Guardian
Newspapers Limited, 2008 

http://www.hindu.com/2008/09/10/stories/2008091055621100.htm
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