# Knee osteoarthritis health information on China's TikTok: a cross-sectional analysis of content quality and public health relevance

**Authors:** Zihan Ding, Jianan Wang, Wangnan Mao, Zheng Yan, Xuchen Zhong, Yintao Du, Lianguo Wu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fdgth.2025.1612749 · Frontiers in Digital Health · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study evaluates the quality of knee osteoarthritis health information on TikTok in China, finding it to be generally low and inconsistent.

## Contribution

The study is the first to systematically assess KOA-related content quality on TikTok using standardized evaluation tools.

## Key findings

- Most KOA videos on TikTok are posted by medical staff, but overall content quality is low.
- Science communicators produce videos with significantly different quality compared to medical professionals.
- Video popularity metrics are weakly correlated with content quality scores.

## Abstract

Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is a chronic joint disorder that significantly affects the quality of life in the older adult. It is primarily characterized by notable knee pain following activity, which typically alleviates with rest. With the rapid growth of the internet, people increasingly rely on social media to obtain health-related information. Short-form videos, as an emerging format, play an important role in information dissemination. TikTok is currently the world's most downloaded application platform primarily dedicated to short-form video content. Against this backdrop, we observed a substantial number of KOA-related videos on TikTok, the quality and reliability of which have not yet been systematically evaluated.

To assess the quality and reliability of KOA-related videos available on the domestic TikTok platform.

A total of 100 KOA-related videos were retrieved and screened from TikTok. Basic metadata were extracted, and video content and format were categorized through coding. The source of each video was also documented. Two independent raters evaluated video quality using the DISCERN instrument, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) benchmark criteria, and the Global Quality Score (GQS).

Of 100 analyzed videos, 96 were posted by medical staff and 4 by science communicators. Eighty videos were audio-based (41% outpatient daily, 39% general science popularization), with others using graph-text formats. The video content is divided into 7 groups: disease prevention, diagnosis, symptoms, description, life-style and therapy, among which the video related to disease description is the most. The average DISCERN, JAMA and GQS scores of videos were 36.29, 1.24 and 2.45, respectively, and the overall quality was low. Further analysis shows that there are significant differences in video quality between science communicators and medical staff. The number of likes, comments, collections, and shares are strongly positively correlated with each other, and they are weakly positively correlated with the number of upload days and DISCERN scores.

KOA-related content on TikTok demonstrates concerning quality limitations, with significant variation across source types. Given TikTok's expanding influence in health communication, urgent improvements and standardized quality control measures are needed.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** KOA (MESH:D020370), joint disorder (MESH:D007592), knee pain (MESH:D046788)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833361/full.md

## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833361/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833361