Abstract
Background
COVID-19 testing remains an essential element of a comprehensive strategy for community mitigation. Social media is a popular source of information about health, including COVID-19 and testing information. One of the most popular communication channels used by adolescents and young adults who search for health information is TikTok—an emerging social media platform.
Objective
The purpose of this study was to describe TikTok videos related to COVID-19 testing.
Methods
The hashtag #covidtesting was searched, and the first 100 videos were included in the study sample. At the time the sample was drawn, these 100 videos garnered more than 50% of the views for all videos cataloged under the hashtag #covidtesting. The content characteristics that were coded included mentions, displays, or suggestions of anxiety, COVID-19 symptoms, quarantine, types of tests, results of test, and disgust/unpleasantness. Additional data that were coded included the number and percentage of views, likes, and comments and the use of music, dance, and humor.
Results
The 100 videos garnered more than 103 million views; 111,000 comments; and over 12.8 million likes. Even though only 44 videos mentioned or suggested disgust/unpleasantness and 44 mentioned or suggested anxiety, those that portrayed tests as disgusting/unpleasant garnered over 70% of the total cumulative number of views (73,479,400/103,071,900, 71.29%) and likes (9,354,691/12,872,505, 72.67%), and those that mentioned or suggested anxiety attracted about 60% of the total cumulative number of views (61,423,500/103,071,900, 59.59%) and more than 8 million likes (8,339,598/12,872,505, 64.79%). Independent one-tailed t tests (α=.05) revealed that videos that mentioned or suggested that COVID-19 testing was disgusting/unpleasant were associated with receiving a higher number of views and likes.
Conclusions
Our finding of an association between TikTok videos that mentioned or suggested that COVID-19 tests were disgusting/unpleasant and these videos’ propensity to garner views and likes is of concern. There is a need for public health agencies to recognize and address connotations of COVID-19 testing on social media.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Informatics
Reference48 articles.
1. A cross-country database of COVID-19 testing
2. WHO coronavirus (COVID-19) dashboardWorld Health Organization2021-06-04https://covid19.who.int
3. Why COVID-19 testing is the key to getting back to normalNational Institutes of Health202009042021-06-04https://www.nia.nih.gov/news/why-covid-19-testing-key-getting-back-normal
4. Testing for COVID-19Centers for Disease Control and Prevention2021-06-04https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/symptoms-testing/testing.html
5. Coronavirus disease 2019 testing basicsU.S. Food & Drug Administration2021-06-04https://www.fda.gov/consumers/consumer-updates/coronavirus-disease-2019-testing-basics