TikTok and Pediatric Nephrology: Content Quality Assessment of Videos Related to Pediatric Kidney Disease and Kidney Transplant

Author:

Sturm Hannah1ORCID,Abdullah Mahie2,Anand Arshia2,Sethna Jonah2,Frank Rachel2,Castellanos Laura2,Singer Pamela2,Basalely Abby2

Affiliation:

1. Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell

2. Cohen Children's Northwell Health Physician Partners Pediatric Nephrology and Kidney Transplant

Abstract

Abstract

Background Social media platforms such as TikTok™ are key sources of health information for young patients and caregivers. Misinformation is prevalent on TikTok™ across healthcare fields, which can perpetuate false beliefs about medical care. Limited data exists on the reliability of pediatric nephrology TikTok™ content. This study aimed to describe the quality of medical content of TikTok™ Videos (TTVs), related to pediatric kidney disease and transplant. Methods TTVs were selected using specific search terms and categorized into pediatric kidney disease and kidney transplant, excluding duplicate and adult-related content. The top 100 TTVs in each category, based on views, were analyzed. TTV characteristics were stratified by account type [physician, non-physician healthcare professional (HCP), non-HCP] and video aim (personal story, education, entertainment). DISCERN scoring, a validated questionnaire evaluating health information reliability, was conducted by 4 independent raters. Inter-rater reliability was assessed using a 2-way random effects model and differences between content creator types were evaluated using one-way ANOVA and post-Hoc Tukey test. Results TTVs had a total of 12.5 million likes and 113.1 million views. Over 70% of videos were created by non-HCPs (n = 147/200). DISCERN scoring revealed low reliability of medical information across content creator types. TTVs created by physicians and non-physician HCPs about kidney disease had significantly higher mean DISCERN scores compared to those created by non-HCPs (2.85, p < 0.001 and 2.48, p = 0.005 respectively). Conclusions Educators within the pediatric nephrology community must keep in mind the lack of reliability of medical information available on TikTok™ and coordinate collective efforts to consider utilizing TikTok™ for patient education.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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