You are here

  1. Home
  2. Research into the impact of cyber victimisation

Research into the impact of cyber victimisation

Girl wearing a green sweatshirt, looking at her phone, with a group of girls in the background

A project around cyber victimisation, which is part of The Open University's (OU) Open Societal Challenges themes around Tackling Inequalities and Living Well, has had findings published.

Dr Zhraa Alhaboby, academic in health sciences at The Open University (OU), has published research highlighting the scale and impact of cyber victimisation on those living with long-term conditions or disabilities.

The research, Cybervictimization of Adults with Long-term Conditions, published in JMIR Publications, examined the scope of cyber-victimisation among adults living with long-term conditions in the UK and the perceived impact on the self-management of chronic conditions. Data from 152 participants showed that almost one in every two adults with chronic conditions in this sample was cyber-victimised (45.4%). Most victims (76.8%) were disabled, and the relationship between cyber-victimisation and disability was statistically significant.

Dr Alhaboby, academic in health sciences and researcher in public health at the OU and author of the study has worked on projects related to cyber-victimisation and chronic conditions, disability discrimination and cyber-hate, chronic disease management, and using innovative technologies in healthcare. Her research has provided evidence to support policy change and recommendations for law reforms in the UK.

Dr Alhaboby explained the significant impact that online abuse could have:

“For us to understand cyber-victimisation experiences we must acknowledge that what happens online is real, and the impact is real. It does not stop if you switch off your phone or computer. The urgency to check the messages does not help either. For a person who is living with a chronic condition, the distress from such experiences can result in poor health outcomes. We have seen this with persons with diabetes, epilepsy, heart disease and thyroid disease”

Read the paper: Cybervictimization of Adults with Long-term Conditions

You may also be interested in:

A version of this story, written by Laura Bandell, originally appeared on OU News.

Quarterly Review of Research

Read our Quarterly Review of Research to learn about our latest quality academic output.

View the latest review

Contact our news team

For all out of hours enquiries, please telephone +44 (0)7901 515891

Contact details

News & articles

A satellite in Space, with the Earth in the background

OU signs significant deal for company to make valves for satellites

The Open University has recently signed a major deal enabling Bradford Space (a Netherlands-based satellite propulsion system manufacturer) to make and utilise OU patented valves for their propulsion systems.

25th April 2024
See all