The Denver Post

Doctors on TikTok are trying to go viral

Platform opens door to vast audience, but also to attacks

- By Emma Goldberg

On TikTok, sex ed is being flipped on its head. Teenagers who load the app might find guidance set to the pulsing beat of “Sex Talk” by Megan Thee Stallion.

A doctor, sporting scrubs and grinning into her camera, instructs them on how to respond if a condom breaks during sex: The pill Plan B can be 95% effective, the video explains.

The video is the work of Dr. Danielle Jones, a gynecologi­st in College Station, Texas, and has racked up millions of views. Comments range from effusive (“this slaps”) to eye-rolling (“thanks for the advice mom” and “ma’am, I’m 14 years old”).

“My TikTok presence is like if you had a friend who just happens to be an OB-GYN,” Jones said. “It’s a good way to give informatio­n to people who need it and meet them where they are.”

Jones is one of many medical profession­als working their way through the rapidly expanding territory of TikTok, the Chinese-owned short-form video app, to counter medical misinforma­tion. The app has been downloaded more than a billion times, and nearly half of its users are ages 16 to 24.

Although medical profession­als have long taken to social media to share healthy messages or promote their work, TikTok poses a new set of challenges, even for the internet adept. Popular posts on the app tend to be short, musical and humorous, complicati­ng the task of physicians hoping to share nuanced lessons on health issues such as vaping, coronaviru­s, nutrition and things you shouldn’t dip in soy sauce. And some physicians who are using the platform to spread credible informatio­n have found themselves the targets of harassment.

Dr. Rose Marie Leslie, a family medicine resident physician at the University of Minnesota Medical School, said TikTok provided an enormous platform for medical public service announceme­nts.

“It has this incredible viewership potential that goes beyond just your own following,” she said.

TikTok’s executives have welcomed the platform’s uses for medical profession­als. “It’s been inspiring to see doctors and nurses take to TikTok in their scrubs to demystify the medical profession,” said Gregory Justice, TikTok’s head of content programmin­g.

Jones, the gynecologi­st, said she was hopeful the platform could help young people develop trust in medical

For decades, sex education in the classroom could be pretty cringey. For some adolescent­s, it meant a pitch for abstinence; others watched their teachers put condoms on bananas and attempt sketches of fallopian tubes that looked more like modern art.

practition­ers and view them as more accessible. “Back in the old days, there was a town doctor and everyone knew where he lived, and you traded milk and eggs for health care,” Jones said. “You had trust in your doctor because you trusted them as a person first.” TikTok, she said, can help to humanize doctors — she’s seen that some of her own patients feel more comfortabl­e with her because they have seen her playful social media posts.

But some doctors are also encounteri­ng responses to their videos that they did not expect.

Earlier this year, Dr. Baldwin, a pediatrici­an in Cincinnati, posted a TikTok listing the diseases that are preventabl­e with vaccines and countering the notion that vaccines cause autism.

Her accounts on TikTok, Twitter, Facebook and Yelp were flooded with threatenin­g comments, including one that read, “Dead doctors don’t lie.”

A team of volunteers that is helping Baldwin monitor her social media banned thousands of users from her Facebook.

Baldwin said she started out feeling enthusiast­ic about the opportunit­y TikTok provides to educate adolescent­s, but her experience with harassment gave her some pause.

A spate of recent TikToks have further stirred questions about the potential for the app’s abuse. One recent TikTok post featured a medical profession­al speculatin­g — as she lip synced to the Rex Orange County lyric “How Could I Ignore You?” — that her patient’s chest pain could have been caused by cocaine. Another showed an emergency room doctor mocking patients who sought treatment in the ER rather than from a primary care physician.

Sarah Mojarad, a lecturer who teaches a course on social media for scientists at the University of Southern California, said she has seen physicians either “bashing their patients” on the app or “whitecoat marketing,” a term that refers to the use of medical prestige to market inappropri­ate products like unauNicole thorized supplement­s.

The youth of TikTok’s audience also raises the stakes when medical profession­als misuse the platform.

“With a young audience, it’s really important to make sure that the content getting out is profession­al and accurate,” Mojarad said. “People may think some of it is medical humor, but it impacts care.”

TikTok’s community guidelines state that the platform does not permit “misinforma­tion that may cause harm to an individual’s health, such as misleading informatio­n about medical treatments.”

Some physicians worry that TikTok’s brief, playful clips can blur the line between general education and patient-specific medical advice.

Dr. Austin Chiang, a gastroente­rologist and chief medical social media officer at Jefferson Health in Philadelph­ia, said he has been asked about specific symptoms on TikTok and has to refer users to establishe­d medical sources or directly to their doctors.

Still, for doctors turned influencer­s, the TikTok learning curve can be steep. Dr. Matthew Schulman, a plastic surgeon in New York, said the slightly older users of Instagram and Snapchat have been vital to his private practice, helping to drive roughly 80% of consultati­ons. He often streams live from the operating room. “Buttock augmentati­on is really popular on social media,” he said.

But TikTok has presented him with cause for additional concern. The virality upside is massive: A post he made earlier this year discussing celebrity clients drew several million views. But as he has watched his 10-year-old daughter use the app, he realized that he must exercise more caution in producing content.

“The demographi­c of TikTok is very young, and as a plastic surgeon I don’t feel comfortabl­e marketing my services to children,” Schulman said. Simultaneo­usly, he knows the app is growing fast. “I don’t want to be caught playing catchup. In two or three years the platform could change, and if I already have an establishe­d account I’m ahead of the game.”

In the meantime, he said, he relies on top-notch TikTok editors — his kids.

 ?? Katie Hayes Luke, © The New York Times Co. file ?? Dr. Danielle Jones, a gynecologi­st who has racked up more than 11 million views on TikTok, works on a health video at her home in College Station, Texas, on Jan. 30.
Katie Hayes Luke, © The New York Times Co. file Dr. Danielle Jones, a gynecologi­st who has racked up more than 11 million views on TikTok, works on a health video at her home in College Station, Texas, on Jan. 30.
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