Turuba Roxanne, Zenone Marco, Srivastava Raman, Stea Jonathan, Quintana Yuri, Ow Nikki, Marchand Kirsten, Kwan Amanda, Ong Anna-Joy, Ding Xiaoxu, Warren Cassia, Marcon Alessandro R, Henderson Jo, Mathias Steve, Barbic Skye
Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Foundry, Providence Health Care, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Digit Health. 2025 Jan 17;11:20552076241297062. doi: 10.1177/20552076241297062. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
TikTok is a global social media platform with over 1 billion active users. Presently, there are few data on how TikTok users navigate the platform for mental health purposes and the content they view.
This study aims to understand the patterns of mental health-related content on TikTok and assesses the accuracy and quality of the advice and information provided.
We performed a summative content analysis on the top 1000 TikTok videos with the hashtag #mentalhealth between October 12 and 16, 2021. Six content themes were developed to code the data: (1) a personal story, perspective, or confessional, (2) advice and information, (3) emoting, (4) references to death, (5) references to science or research, and (6) a product or service for sale. Advice and information were further assessed by clinical experts.
A total of 970 mental health-related videos were pulled for our analysis ( = 30 removed due to non-English content). The most prevalent content themes included a personal story, perspective, or confessional ( = 574), advice and information ( = 319), emoting ( = 198), references to death ( = 128). Advice and information were considered misleading in 33.0% of videos ( = 106), with misleading content performing better. Few videos included references to scientific evidence or research ( = 37).
Healthcare practitioners and researchers may consider increasing their presence on the platform to promote the dissemination of evidence-based information to a wider and more youth-targeted population. Interventions to reduce the amount of misinformation on the platform and increase people's ability to discern between anecdotal and evidence-based information are also warranted.
TikTok是一个拥有超过10亿活跃用户的全球社交媒体平台。目前,关于TikTok用户如何为心理健康目的浏览该平台以及他们所浏览的内容的数据很少。
本研究旨在了解TikTok上与心理健康相关的内容模式,并评估所提供建议和信息的准确性和质量。
我们于2021年10月12日至16日对带有#心理健康标签的TikTok上排名前1000的视频进行了总结性内容分析。开发了六个内容主题来对数据进行编码:(1)个人故事、观点或自白,(2)建议和信息,(3)情感表达,(4)提及死亡,(5)提及科学或研究,以及(6)待售产品或服务。建议和信息由临床专家进一步评估。
共提取了970个与心理健康相关的视频进行分析(30个因非英语内容被移除)。最普遍的内容主题包括个人故事、观点或自白(574个)、建议和信息(319个)、情感表达(198个)、提及死亡(128个)。33.0%的视频(106个)中的建议和信息被认为具有误导性,且具有误导性的内容表现更好。很少有视频提及科学证据或研究(37个)。
医疗从业者和研究人员可能会考虑增加在该平台上的活跃度,以促进向更广泛且以年轻人为目标群体传播循证信息。减少平台上错误信息数量并提高人们区分轶事和循证信息能力的干预措施也很有必要。