An analysis of oral contraceptive related videos on TikTok.

adolescent birth control contraception contraceptive pill infodemiology misinformation online content oral contraceptives reproductive health sex education social media social media analytics

Journal

AJOG global reports
ISSN: 2666-5778
Titre abrégé: AJOG Glob Rep
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101777907

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Aug 2024
Historique:
medline: 30 7 2024
pubmed: 30 7 2024
entrez: 30 7 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

TikTok has increasingly become a source of information about reproductive health. Patients seeking health information about oral contraception on TikTok may be influenced by videos containing misinformation or biased information. This social media infodemiological study aims to provide a descriptive content analysis of the quality and reliability of oral contraceptive health information on TikTok. Researchers screened 1,000 TikTok videos from December 2022 to March 2023 retrieved under various search terms related to oral contraceptives. Data, including engagement metrics such as views, likes, comments, saves, and shares, were recorded. Video content including contraceptive methods discussed, efficacy, tolerability, and side effects were recorded. Two reviewers independently used a modified DISCERN criteria and Global Quality Scale (GQS) to assess the quality and reliability of information for each video. Five hundred seventy-four videos were analyzed after applying exclusion criteria. Videos had a median length of 27 seconds (Q1=13sec, Q3=57sec) and received a median of 35,000 total views (Q1=4856 views, Q3=411,400 views) and 166 views per day (Q1=28 views per day, Q3=2021 views per day). Video creators were 83.3% female and 58.7% white. The mean modified DISCERN score was 1.63 (SD=1.06) and the mean GQS score was 2.28 (SD=1.37). Video creators were 83.3% female and 58.7% white. The mean modified DISCERN score was 1.63 (SD=1.06) and the mean GQS score was 2.28 (SD=1.37). The most common topic discussed in the videos was the effects of contraception. Healthcare professionals had significantly higher DISCERN and GQS scores ( TikTok videos related to oral contraceptive health had low quality and reliability of information. The majority of videos were made by non-healthcare providers, and the most common topic discussed was the effects of contraception. Videos made by healthcare professionals contained more reliable contraceptive information, but received less engagement than videos made by non-healthcare professionals. Healthcare providers should consider the prevalence of poor-quality information about oral contraceptives on social media when counseling and educating patients about reproductive health.

Sections du résumé

Background UNASSIGNED
TikTok has increasingly become a source of information about reproductive health. Patients seeking health information about oral contraception on TikTok may be influenced by videos containing misinformation or biased information.
Objective UNASSIGNED
This social media infodemiological study aims to provide a descriptive content analysis of the quality and reliability of oral contraceptive health information on TikTok.
Study Design UNASSIGNED
Researchers screened 1,000 TikTok videos from December 2022 to March 2023 retrieved under various search terms related to oral contraceptives. Data, including engagement metrics such as views, likes, comments, saves, and shares, were recorded. Video content including contraceptive methods discussed, efficacy, tolerability, and side effects were recorded. Two reviewers independently used a modified DISCERN criteria and Global Quality Scale (GQS) to assess the quality and reliability of information for each video.
Results UNASSIGNED
Five hundred seventy-four videos were analyzed after applying exclusion criteria. Videos had a median length of 27 seconds (Q1=13sec, Q3=57sec) and received a median of 35,000 total views (Q1=4856 views, Q3=411,400 views) and 166 views per day (Q1=28 views per day, Q3=2021 views per day). Video creators were 83.3% female and 58.7% white. The mean modified DISCERN score was 1.63 (SD=1.06) and the mean GQS score was 2.28 (SD=1.37). Video creators were 83.3% female and 58.7% white. The mean modified DISCERN score was 1.63 (SD=1.06) and the mean GQS score was 2.28 (SD=1.37). The most common topic discussed in the videos was the effects of contraception. Healthcare professionals had significantly higher DISCERN and GQS scores (
Conclusion UNASSIGNED
TikTok videos related to oral contraceptive health had low quality and reliability of information. The majority of videos were made by non-healthcare providers, and the most common topic discussed was the effects of contraception. Videos made by healthcare professionals contained more reliable contraceptive information, but received less engagement than videos made by non-healthcare professionals. Healthcare providers should consider the prevalence of poor-quality information about oral contraceptives on social media when counseling and educating patients about reproductive health.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39077679
doi: 10.1016/j.xagr.2024.100364
pii: S2666-5778(24)00058-3
pmc: PMC11284445
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

100364

Informations de copyright

© 2024 The Authors.

Auteurs

Melanie Shackleford (M)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Anna Horvath (A)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Mayra Repetto (M)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Andrea Thi (A)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Rory Twells (R)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Maggie Sanders (M)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Stephanie Fernandez (S)

Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Shackleford, Horvath, Repetto, Thi, Twells, Sanders, and Fernandez).

Dale Netski (D)

Department of Medical Education, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Netski and Batra).
Office of Faculty Affairs, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Netski).

Kavita Batra (K)

Department of Medical Education, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Netski and Batra).
Office of Research, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Batra).

Nadia Gomez (N)

Department of Gynecologic Surgery & Obstetrics, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Gomez and Free).

Leanne Free (L)

Department of Gynecologic Surgery & Obstetrics, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (Gomez and Free).

Classifications MeSH