Affiliation:
1. University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA
2. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands
3. Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam The Netherlands
4. University of Twente Enschede The Netherlands
Abstract
AbstractDisease advocacy organisations (DAOs) are critical for raising awareness about illnesses and supporting research. While most studies of DAOs focus on personally affected patient‐activists, an underappreciated constituency are external allies. Building from social movement theory, we distinguish between beneficiary constituents (disease patients and their loved ones) and conscience constituents (allies) and investigate their relative fundraising effectiveness. While the former have credibility due to illness experience that should increase fundraising, the latter are more numerous. Our study is also the first to investigate where DAO supporters fundraise—through friendship‐ versus workplace‐based networks—and how this interacts with constituent types. Our large‐scale dataset includes 9372 groups (nearly 90,000 participants) active in the ‘Movember’ campaign, a men’s health movement around testicular and prostate cancer. We find robust evidence that groups with more beneficiary constituents raise significantly greater funds per participant. Yet because conscience constituents are more numerous, they raise the majority of total aggregate funds. We also find an interaction effect: beneficiary constituents do better in friendship networks, conscience constituents in workplaces. Our findings bear implications for DAOs, indicating they may benefit by encouraging disease patient families to fundraise through friends, and for external allies to focus requests on workplace networks.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Health (social science)
Cited by
2 articles.
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