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in General Moderation by Newbie (370 points)

A recent report found that when reviewing the top trending 100 videos on TikTok tagged with “#mentalhealthtips,” more than half were found to contain misleading or inaccurate information about mental‐health practices. People.com This is particularly relevant for college students, many of whom turn to social media for quick, shareable wellness hacks or peer advice. The claim draws attention to the gap between content that looks helpful and content that may mislead, especially when it comes to serious mental-health issues.

It’s important to fact-check because misleading mental-health content can cause harm: self-diagnosis, skipping professional help, or spreading unvetted tips that may worsen conditions rather than help them. While the claim states “over half,” the nuance is that the review covered trending videos under one hashtag and may not represent all content on the platform, but the pattern is strong enough to warrant caution.

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by Apprentice (1.5k points)
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It does seem that there is some truth behind this. I was able to find an article by the University of Chicago that was also stating the same thing. "Around 44% of the videos contained non-factual information. Videos from “nonmedical influencers” ". i was also able to find an article by Plushcare that said "83.7% of mental health advice on TikTok is misleading. While 14.2% of videos include content that could be potentially damaging." and "While experts concluded that 54% of advice contained accurate information, 31% of videos contained inaccurate information.". It seems a lot of the mental health content on Tiktok is done by non-professionals and then gets quickly spread. So I would call this true for the most part with the numbers ranging from a little under half to a bit over depending on how the research was done. 

https://biologicalsciences.uchicago.edu/news/health-information-tiktok 

https://plushcare.com/blog/tiktok-mental-health 

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by Newbie (310 points)

This claim is true. The claim is that a large percentage of mental health "tips" on TikTok are false and misleading. The source article from People Magazine speaks about how there is misleading information on TikTok, often leading vulnerable and impressionable youth to self-diagnose and believe false information about their mental health. I found an article by The Guardian (along with many reliable journals and news sites) supporting this claim. They say that TikTok videos provide many "solutions" or "explanations" to different mental health struggles, and over half of them are misleading or false. They state that 52 out of 100 videos regarding mental health contained misleading and even harmful information. All of this definitely supports this claim.

Hall, R., & Keenan, R. (2025, May 31). More than half of top 100 mental health TikToks contain misinformation, study finds. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/31/more-than-half-of-top-100-mental-health-tiktoks-contain-misinformation-study-finds

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by Novice (500 points)
I agree with this true statement, reading new york times, it said how instead of turning to friends and talking about how they are feeling, they turn to TikTok, hearing what TikTok is saying, and then agreeing because what they are going through tiktok is saying it, and then giving you tips on what to do. " But if you're organized and you have structure and you like things a certain way and you're functioning, you don't have obsessive compulsive disorder - you're organized," Ms. barsch said said. "People who have O.C.D cannot function because of their compulsions. (New York Times).
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ago by Newbie (200 points)
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I think that this comment is very insightful and I like when you made that comment on people with OCD and how tiktok will sort of diagnose people in a way and make people believe that they have some disorder that they do not. In the same article you mentioned by Christina Caron, it mentions that many disorders have different symptoms for different age groups "But part of what makes diagnosis so complicated is that the same disorder can express itself in a child, adolescent and adult very differently — in other words, the same list of symptoms does not apply to every age group." This means when people are casting such wide nets trying to diagnose their symtoms on TikTok, there is a very high chance that they will come to the conclusion that they have a certain condition when they do not just because they matched their symptoms to a post on TikTok.
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ago by Newbie (220 points)

I liked this topic and the outcome you found. After looking through the other answers here the claim seems pretty unanimous but it made me curious what we can do to identify which information is accurate and what isn't. In my research I referred to The Mayo Clinic and the reminders they give to identify misleading content. Namely things like fear tactics, trying to sell you something, or excluding reliable sources of information are all common red flags to watch out for when engaging with social media posts that don't come straight from professionals or already reputable sources.

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ago by (180 points)

This claim is true, according to my research 52% of any top 100 videos under the mental health tips hashtag contains misinformation. This investigation consist of a team of psychologist, psychiatrist, and academic specialist. I was also able to read that many influencers misuse the clinical language by calling things they believe is "therapy". Not only this, but many even categorize these tips as a "quick-fix"  for their viewers. Two examples would be, "how to heal trauma" or "eating an orange will reduce your anxiety". To go further, my research has provided the fact that many influencers have oversimplified complex conditions. With misinformation like this, it causes people to self-diagnose themselves just because a video said so. Lastly, this is very harmful to many users because it can replace professional guidance that many people may need. Altogether, I believe this claim is true with the research that was done.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/31/more-than-half-of-top-100-mental-health-tiktoks-contain-misinformation-study-finds
Hall, Rachel, and Rachel Keenan. "More than half of top 100 mental health TikToks contain misinformation, study finds." The Guardian, 31 May 2025, www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/31/more-than-half-of-top-100-mental-health-tiktoks-contain-misinformation-study-finds. Accessed 8 Apr. 2026.



 

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