
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Mental health information on social media can be both revelatory and misleading. How do clinicians and their patients make sense of it?
TikTok and other social media sites are full of mental health content—often short, grabby, first-person videos detailing symptoms for conditions like ADHD and autism. But what does this mean for teens and young adults who spend hours a day scrolling?
A new study published in PLOS One analyzes the 100 most viewed TikTok videos about ADHD to assess both how accurate they are and how young people respond to them. Researchers found that about half of the videos were inaccurate or missing key context, and that the more TikToks young adults watched, the less critical they were of the content.
For some, watching social videos about mental health conditions led them to better understand themselves and eventually get a proper diagnosis and treatment. For others it made them consider if they have conditions they don’t meet the diagnostic criteria for.
Host Flora Lichtman talks with the lead author of the ADHD TikTok study, Vasileia Karasavva, a PhD Student in clinical psychology at the University of British Columbia; and Dr. Jennifer Katzenstein, director of psychology, neuropsychology, and social work at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.
Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
By Science Friday and WNYC Studios4.4
58665,866 ratings
Mental health information on social media can be both revelatory and misleading. How do clinicians and their patients make sense of it?
TikTok and other social media sites are full of mental health content—often short, grabby, first-person videos detailing symptoms for conditions like ADHD and autism. But what does this mean for teens and young adults who spend hours a day scrolling?
A new study published in PLOS One analyzes the 100 most viewed TikTok videos about ADHD to assess both how accurate they are and how young people respond to them. Researchers found that about half of the videos were inaccurate or missing key context, and that the more TikToks young adults watched, the less critical they were of the content.
For some, watching social videos about mental health conditions led them to better understand themselves and eventually get a proper diagnosis and treatment. For others it made them consider if they have conditions they don’t meet the diagnostic criteria for.
Host Flora Lichtman talks with the lead author of the ADHD TikTok study, Vasileia Karasavva, a PhD Student in clinical psychology at the University of British Columbia; and Dr. Jennifer Katzenstein, director of psychology, neuropsychology, and social work at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.
Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.

91,134 Listeners

22,030 Listeners

43,968 Listeners

32,150 Listeners

38,473 Listeners

30,660 Listeners

43,758 Listeners

38,752 Listeners

9,168 Listeners

1,566 Listeners

471 Listeners

944 Listeners

12,725 Listeners

14,444 Listeners

12,184 Listeners

825 Listeners

1,542 Listeners

3,511 Listeners

2,800 Listeners

1,400 Listeners

1,196 Listeners

5,568 Listeners

5,772 Listeners

421 Listeners

16,257 Listeners

6,420 Listeners

2,822 Listeners

2,300 Listeners

643 Listeners

1,962 Listeners

103 Listeners

20 Listeners

9 Listeners