Study reveals misleading gout advice on TikTok

A new study indicates that many TikTok videos about gout provide inaccurate or incomplete information, often emphasizing diet over essential medical treatments. Researchers analyzed 200 videos and found that long-term therapies are rarely mentioned, potentially leading to harmful misconceptions. The findings highlight the platform's role in health information and the need for more professional input.

Gout affects around 41 million people worldwide, with about seven million new diagnoses each year. This form of inflammatory arthritis results from excess urate in the blood, forming crystals in joints that cause severe pain and swelling. Despite its prevalence, public understanding remains limited, and many patients fail to achieve proper control of the condition.

Medical experts recommend long-term urate-lowering therapy as the cornerstone of gout management, according to guidelines from rheumatology organizations. However, a study published in Rheumatology Advances in Practice by Oxford University Press reveals significant gaps in online advice. Researchers examined the first 200 TikTok videos appearing after searching for "gout" on December 5, 2024.

The videos featured various creators: 27% were from individuals with gout or their family members, 24% from health professionals, and 23% from the general public. Content purposes varied, with 38% offering health advice, 20% sharing personal stories, and 19% promoting products. About 45% of videos discussed risk factors, predominantly linking them to diet and lifestyle (90% of those mentions). Management tips appeared in 79% of clips, centering on dietary changes (53%), such as avoiding salt, alcohol, and red meat—one video from a hospitalized patient advised viewers to "reduce your incidences of gout if you cut back on your salt, your alcohol, and your red meat."

Supplements, herbal remedies, and home treatments were frequently promoted, sometimes with claims of no side effects. In contrast, only seven videos addressed prescription drugs, mostly for short-term relief like colchicine, ibuprofen, or naproxen. Strikingly, just two mentioned urate-lowering therapy.

The analysis showed that videos often oversimplify gout as a lifestyle issue, downplaying genetics, kidney function, and body weight as primary drivers. This framing can stigmatize sufferers as personally responsible. Lead author Samuela ‘Ofanoa noted, "TikTok has great potential as a tool to raise awareness around health issues such as gout and promote information that aligns with clinical guidelines." She urged more health professionals to create countering content in this digital space, where 1.2 billion users engage, and many, including 92% of young women in one survey, encounter health info incidentally.

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