TikTok has become a prominent space where adolescents and young adults encounter health information, often influencing how symptoms, mental health concerns, and wellness practices are understood before any interaction with formal healthcare systems. The platform's short-form videos offer approachable and relatable narratives that can reduce stigma and support awareness, particularly for topics that young people may find difficult to discuss in traditional settings. Clinicians, patient advocates, and public health organizations have used TikTok to extend the reach of health communication to audiences who may be less engaged with conventional sources. At the same time, the structure of the platform introduces challenges for health literacy and social responsibility. Health content is frequently encountered through passive exposure rather than deliberate searching, and visibility is shaped by engagement rather than accuracy or clinical nuance. Within this environment, health creators often act as informal apomediators, helping users interpret symptoms, diagnoses, and coping strategies outside clinical contexts. While some creators provide thoughtful and credible guidance, others rely on personal experience or commercial messaging, and distinctions between expertise and influence are not always clear. Repeated exposure to familiar voices can foster trust regardless of the quality of information being shared. Algorithmic amplification further narrows what users see, reinforcing specific themes or claims and increasing the circulation of simplified or emotionally framed health narratives. These dynamics can encourage self-diagnosis, blur the boundaries between normal experiences and illness, and shape expectations around care-seeking. Such patterns are especially relevant for young people with lower digital health literacy, who may be more vulnerable to persuasive cues. This commentary highlights the need for ethically grounded apomediation, clearer credibility signals, and digital literacy supports that reflect the realities of short-form video platforms. Addressing these issues is essential for fostering a more informed, responsible, and equitable digital health environment.
Kaur et al. (Fri,) studied this question.