New health, nutrition and weight loss trends are popping up daily on social media. Many of these fly-by-night trends are simply that, but a new study focusing on the platform TikTok found that these trends may have more of a hold on people than once thought. To expose the inaccurate information being extracted from TikTok, MyFitnessPal, the #1 nutrition and food tracking app, partnered with Dublin City University on a two-part research project called “Health and Nutrition Inaccuracies on TikTok”. Part 1 looked at social media influencers and Part 2 looked at Gen Z TikTok users. Study findings ranged from determining that only about 2% of content being classified as accurate to Gen Z users trusting influencers more if they claim to be qualified dietitians. Tune in to this episode to learn about: · how and where Americans are getting their health information has changed · improving our digital literacy is necessary to make better choices · MyFitnessPal’s ‘Nutrition IQ’ surveys’ key themes and concerning statistics · the Dublin City University 2-part research study · why the study focused on TikTok vs other platforms · preliminary findings from the 2-part study · what the “2% accuracy” finding really means · the positive finding about Gen Z’s trust in registered dietitians over unqualified influencers · the importance of licensed professionals helping to champion scientific truth across social media · the mere exposure effect, parasocial effect, and rules of persuasion · how to identify warning signs when scrolling on social media · how RDNs can stay on top of trends and leverage them to create compelling content that is evidence-based · a helpful infographic on ‘How to Spot Questionable Nutrition Tips on Social Media’ · if it’s ‘safe’ to be on TikTok · resources for the public and health professionals Full shownotes, transcript and resources at: https://soundbitesrd.com/271)