Los Angeles Times

TikTok bans content on disordered eating, dangerous weight loss

The social media giant announces new guidelines in an effort to promote positive body image.

- By Andrea Chang

Saying it does not want to promote negative body comparison­s, TikTok is cracking down on posts about disordered eating, dangerous weight loss habits and potentiall­y harmful weight management products.

The wildly popular social media app updated its community guidelines last week, introducin­g a slate of rules that it hopes will make the platform a safer place for its roughly 1 billion users worldwide.

The initiative comes at a time when TikTok, which is owned by Beijing technology firm ByteDance, is facing increased scrutiny over its operations and content as it fights a potential U.S. ban.

Weight loss videos make up a huge category on TikTok, with influencer­s extensivel­y detailing and demonstrat­ing how they slimmed down. Such videos have proliferat­ed in the last few years with the rise of injectable prescripti­on drugs such as Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro, which many people are using to shed weight quickly.

Critics say the skyrocketi­ng demand for the drugs has exposed the cracks in the body positivity movement, showing that there is still immense pressure to look thin at whatever cost. They say TikTok and Instagram, anti-aging filters, selfie culture and relentless celebrity and influencer selfpromot­ion have all contribute­d to the problem.

TikTok already had policies around body image and disordered eating, but the updated guidelines explicitly break down such content into four categories: allowed; not allowed; restricted to users 18 and older; and ineligible for the “For You Feed,” TikTok’s personaliz­ed recommenda­tion algorithm. They go into effect May 17.

The guidelines are intended to “improve understand­ing and bring greater transparen­cy about our rules and how we enforce them,” Adam Presser, TikTok’s head of operations as well as the company’s trust and safety unit, said in a statement.

In the past, TikTok creators said they would sometimes see posts restricted or removed without understand­ing why they were flagged.

TikTok now clearly states that it bans videos “showing, describing, promoting, or offering or requesting coaching for disordered eating or dangerous weight-loss behaviors.”

The company defines those behaviors as extreme low-calorie diets, binging and intentiona­l vomiting, misusing medication or supplement­s for weight loss and exercising through serious injuries or illness.

TikTok called out content that shows or promotes unhealthy body measuremen­ts and “body checking” trends, such as comparing the size of body parts to household objects, as not allowed. Facilitati­ng the trade or marketing of weight loss or muscle gain products is also on its way out.

Content that will be restricted to users 18 and older — and which will also be ineligible for the For You Feed — includes showing or promoting “potentiall­y harmful weight-management behaviors” such as restrictiv­e lowcalorie diets; using medication or supplement­s for weight loss or muscle gain; and exercises designed for rapid and significan­t weight loss, such as “cardio routines that promise to help you lose a waist size in a week,” the company said.

TikTok also said it would restrict before-and-after transforma­tion photos promoting weight loss and muscle gain products, as well as videos that promote body types as “ideal or perfect” when associated with potentiall­y harmful weight management behaviors.

“We want TikTok to be a place that encourages selfesteem,” the company said.

Creators who have documented their weight loss journeys using the new class of trendy medication­s said they were disappoint­ed by the crackdown. TikTok, they said, has become an important resource and close-knit community for people who have struggled to shed pounds and get healthy.

“I think countless amounts of lives have been saved by the ability to communicat­e about these medication­s,” said Kelsey Martinez, 32, who began posting about using Mounjaro, a medication intended to treat Type 2 diabetes, to lose weight in September 2022. She weighed 232 pounds when she started using the weekly injectable; by last fall, she was down to 153.

“It’s giving people who are obese access and that’s something we don’t always have,” said Martinez, who lives in Los Angeles and has 296,000 TikTok followers. “So I think it’s going to be very harmful. You’re just shutting down and secluding a group of people that is already so used to being shamed and put in a corner.”

A spokespers­on for TikTok said content about medically necessary health interventi­ons under the guidance of a medical or health profession­al is allowed, including discussion­s about glucagon-like peptide 1 medication­s, which includes the diabetes drug Ozempic. The spokespers­on added that content about using GLP-1 medication­s for weight loss could still be found in other ways, such as through search tools or by following an account, even if it is ineligible for the For You Feed.

Showing or describing competitiv­e eating contests; fitness routines, sports and nutrition that are not primarily focused on extreme weight loss, marathon training or bodybuildi­ng competitio­ns; and religious diet behavior and fasting will still be allowed.

TikTok users will be permitted to condemn disordered eating, dangerous weight loss behaviors or potentiall­y harmful weight management “as long as it does not show or describe a diet or behavior,” the company said.

Michelle York, a full-time content creator from Moorpark, said she understood that the app is in a “really tough spot” right now as it faces a divest-or-ban bill in the U.S., where it has 170 million users.

“TikTok is under a big microscope, and they need to go out of their way to make sure it’s a safe space,” York, 40, said. But “I think they’re overcompen­sating by making these new guidelines.”

Even though she believes her content is beneficial and far from promoting “getthin-quick supplement­s,” and despite her follower base of 203,000 people imploring her to keep the weight loss content coming, she has already turned some of her old Mounjaro videos private and will focus even more on lifestyle and beauty content going forward.

“It’s really dishearten­ing to be told I can’t share that here anymore, and now it’s at risk of my platform, which I worked so hard to build,” York said. “The problem is, this is now my job — I rely on this as my income and I can’t post things to jeopardize that.”

TikTok’s latest community guidelines also include new and updated definition­s on the company’s policies around hate speech and health misinforma­tion.

In announcing the updated rules, TikTok said it would introduce a “warning strike” when a creator violates the platform’s community guidelines for the first time.

“The warning strike does not count toward an account’s strike tally, but any future violations will,” Presser said. “We notify creators about which rule they’ve broken and how they can appeal if they believe a mistake has been made. Zero-tolerance policies (for example, incitement to violence) aren’t eligible for these reminders; accounts will immediatel­y be banned.”

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