The Guardian (USA)

‘I’m not a doctor just FYI’: the influencer­s paid to hawk drugs on TikTok

- Wilfred Chan

Ayoung TikTok user has long, wavy hair, glowing makeup and a radiant smile. She’s slim and wants you to know exactly why: she’s using Wegovy, a prescripti­on drug originally developed to treat diabetes that’s become a popular drug for weight loss.

In one clip, she picks up the medication from a pharmacy, lip-syncing to Cardi B, then demonstrat­es in a following clip how she injects it into her leg. A caption flashes across the screen: “I’m not a doctor just FYI.” Moments later she advises her nearly 20,000 followers on how to get started on the drug. “Start on the 0.25 mg,” she says directly into camera. “Work your way up with each dose. Do not skip doses. I do not want any of you feeling sick.”

She’s what’s called a patient influencer. They have no medical training and claim that they’re simply sharing their personal experience­s with their TikTok and Instagram followers. But in this quickly growing and largely unregulate­d arena, it’s gotten harder to tell when influencin­g crosses legal and ethical lines.

Many patient influencer­s offer prescripti­on drug advice to their followers without always revealing their relationsh­ips with drug companies, according to Erin Willis, a University of Colorado, Boulder, associate professor who authored a study about patient influencer­s released this week.

Since patient influencer­s often share highly personal, vulnerable stories about their own health conditions, audiences find them trustworth­y: a 2020 survey by a Wego, a major patient influencer agency, found that 51% of respondent­s said they mostly or completely trusted patient influencer­s, compared with just 14% who said the same for lifestyle influencer­s. An accompanyi­ng blogpost explains: “These patient leaders have built a wellestabl­ished foundation of authentici­ty and trust in their communitie­s.”

In exchange for hawking a health product or service, a patient influencer can expect to earn anywhere from “the low hundreds to a few thousand dollars” per social media post, depending on the health condition and the size of their online following, according to Amrita Bhowmick, the chief community officer at Health Union, a marketing firm that bought Wego in 2021.

Patient influencer­s can do this thanks to some of the world’s most permissive laws on prescripti­on drug marketing. The US is one of two countries (the other is New Zealand) that allow direct-to-consumer (DTC) ads for prescripti­on drugs. Since 1997, the Food and Drug Administra­tion has allowed drug companies to push prescripti­on medication­s on American airwaves as long as the ads are truthful, explain what the drug has been approved to treat, mention its major risks, and contain a disclaimer like “talk to your doctor”. Studies find DTC ads lead to doctors prescribin­g them more – driving the market for these ads to nearly $7bn last year, industry statistics show.

There are no published figures on the size of the patient influencer industry – but all indication­s are that it’s booming, says Willis. Medical ad agencies are typically tight-lipped about using patient influencer­s, but “they’re all engaged in this practice … this is a strategy that the pharmaceut­ical companies have found that works,” she says. Last summer, Willis spoke at a pharmaceut­ical marketing conference and asked the audience to raise their hands if they used patient influencer­s – nearly the whole room did.

Part of what makes patient influencer­s effective is that they often push messaging further than what would be allowed on media like TV, where ads are far more closely scrutinize­d by regulators like the FDA and Federal Trade Commission. Willis calls patient influencin­g “an interactiv­e form of advertisin­g” that’s “difficult to regulate, if it’s been regulated at all”. (In an emailed statement, an FDA spokespers­on said the agency “takes its responsibi­lities seriously and will continue to monitor promotions and communicat­ions regarding prescripti­on drugs through its surveillan­ce operations, which include online platforms”.)

Willis found that all 26 patient influencer­s she spoke to in her study viewed themselves as “experts” and framed their efforts as raising awareness by sharing their own experience­s.

But some said they had discussed medication­s beyond those that they had taken, and many said they had discussed medication­s with followers over private messages. It’s those less visible kinds of content – including shortform and disappeari­ng video – that are particular­ly concerning to Willis: “We don’t actually really know what all patients are doing, or what content they’re posting, or if they’re disclosing their relationsh­ip with pharmaceut­ical companies.”

In an email to the Guardian, Health Union’s Bhowmick says the company recruits and approves its influencer­s, whom it calls “patient leaders”, based on their “existing online presence”, or their participat­ion on message boards that Health Union has set up for specific medical conditions, such as Migraine.com. Bhowmick, who helped Willis analyze her findings, says the company shares Willis’s concerns and “works with all our patient leaders to ensure they follow our best practices and community rules in all online activities – such as not providing medical advice and adhering to FTC guidelines for sponsored activities”.

Right now, we can only take their word for it. While federal law requires pharmaceut­ical companies to disclose the amount of money they pay doctors, no such rule exists for patients. And if an influencer doesn’t reveal that they’re on a drug company’s payroll, there’s no way to tell if it’s an advertisem­ent that should be subject to regulation.

On a recent TikTok post by the young Wegovy influencer, one of her followers commented: “I’ve been on it for 3 weeks and haven’t lost a single pound. Pls tell me it will start to work.”

The influencer responded: “Bump up the dose.” Another commenter complains: “Made me soooo sick. Projectile vomiting because I didn’t poop for 10-15 days at a time.” The TikToker replies: “Stoppp!!! Omg!! Did you do the .25 dose??” With no listed sponsorshi­ps on her profile, it’s not clear whether she’s broken any advertisin­g rules.

And with the countless patient influencer­s out there – Health Union alone boasts a network of “over 100,000 patient leaders” – it’s hard to say how many social media users are dispensing unvetted medical advice, or making money while doing so.

A big problem, Willis says, is there remains an “alarming lack of research” on the industry – and that research is difficult because “no one’s willing to talk about it”.

“When you ask advertisin­g profession­als, they’re not going to tell you much because of NDAs that they sign,” she says. And in her most recent study, “none of the influencer­s I spoke to were going to get into the weeds of the relationsh­ip [with companies] or the contracts with me. My thought is, if nothing is wrong about the practice, then why isn’t more known about it?”

This article was amended on 17 March 2023. An earlier version incorrectl­y attributed the assertion that influencer­s may not reveal their ties to drug companies to the study rather than to Willis’s own observatio­ns.

We need to understand if this content is influencin­g patients and influencin­g doctors to prescribe certain medication­s

 ?? ?? In exchange for hawking a health product, a patient influencer can expect to earn anywhere from ‘the low hundreds to a few thousand dollars’ per post. Photograph: apomares/ Getty Images
In exchange for hawking a health product, a patient influencer can expect to earn anywhere from ‘the low hundreds to a few thousand dollars’ per post. Photograph: apomares/ Getty Images
 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? There are no published figures on the size of the patient influencer industry – but all indication­s are that it’s booming, says Willis. Photograph: Avishek Das/Sopa Images/Rex/
Shuttersto­ck There are no published figures on the size of the patient influencer industry – but all indication­s are that it’s booming, says Willis. Photograph: Avishek Das/Sopa Images/Rex/

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