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The National Child Health Poll surveyed more than 1,400 Australian parents and one of their children aged between 12 and 17 years old.
“It’s probably not the best thing for young skin or those more prone to melanoma.”
Paediatrician and director of the National Child Health Poll, Dr Anthea Rhodes, said it was important to teach children how to identify evidence-based health information.
“The teen years are a time of self-discovery and curiosity — for influencers and marketing giants, however, this can provide the potential for big business in a relatively vulnerable population,” she said.
Concerns about reproductive health content
The researchers acknowledge the study is constrained by limitations, including a potential for selection bias, the relatively small sample size, and the inclusion of English-language only videos.
Megan Bugden, the report’s co-author and a lecturer in public health at LaTrobe, said a lot of the advice given on TikTok is based on personal experience and beliefs rather than medical advice or evidence.
She said what’s worrying is that it will mislead a large proportion of young people by over-emphasising the reliability of the method — failing to discuss the potential risks of unplanned pregnancy or sexually transmitted infections.