The Unexpected Health Benefits of Social Media

Those supportive DMs and niche Facebook groups can have a positive impact on your well-being

Jenni Gritters
Elemental

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Photo by Marten Bjork on Unsplash

InIn 2016, 39-year-old Arizona resident Laura Willard became ill, but nobody could figure out what was wrong with her. She gasped for air after walking up the stairs, had serious heart issues, and half of her face drooped. Her eyes were red, her muscles twitched nonstop, and all of her joints were swollen and painful. At one point, Willard could barely swallow food.

Dozens of doctors reviewed her case and came up with nothing. As her symptoms progressed, Willard started to do her own online research. It was, she says, a matter of life or death. Eventually, when her ear turned bright red and swelled up, she discovered a posting online about a disease called relapsing polychondritis, which causes your body to attack anything with cartilage in it.

Willard thought she might have this rare disease, so she reached out to more doctors, several of whom agreed that she’d found the right diagnosis. Around the same time, Willard also came across the relapsing polychondritis Facebook group, a community with hundreds of people from around the world suffering from the same thing.

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