“…For many decades, the role of social support in the enhancement of health and wellness has been a topic of interest to scientists and practitioners across many related disciplines, including medical, psychological and sociological lines of inquiry (Caplan, 1979, Cohen & Syme, 1985, Tracy & Whittaker, 1990, DiMatteo, 2004. Under the umbrella of social support, a large and comprehensive literature on supportive communication has emerged, spanning face-toface and technology-mediated communication (Burleson & MacGeorge, 2002, Adams, Baumer & Gay, 2014. Some of the earliest work on social support offered definitions of this construct that tie it strongly to elements of compassion, such that the target of social support is made aware that (s)he belongs to a community and is loved, cared for and esteemed (Moss, 1973, Cobb, 1976).…”