How Do TikTok and Other Social Media Sites Promote Depression As A Marketing Tool?

How TikTok Promotes Depression As A Marketing Tool
Spread the love

  • Recent TikTok and social media trends have been using depression as a marketing tool.
  • This made experts sound warning bells on the negative link between influencer culture and mental health.

Social Media, Tiktok, And Mental Health

The Internet and social media platforms (like Instagram and TikTok) comprise effective channels through which adults—particularly adolescents and teenagers—can access information about mental health.

In recent years, several celebrities have fallen back on these domains to openly discuss their mental health struggles. Practices like posting “melt-down selfies” or reels and going live to discuss mental health have also gained momentum.

However, not all conversations about mental health conducted over the Internet fulfill their good intentions.

Why Social Media Is Dangerous To Mental Health

Critics have cited that social media post formats (such as less-than-a-minute-long reels, 10-slide posts, or brief captions) tend not to leave space for adequate information about mental health conditions. At best, individually, the posts contain a sketchy summary of symptoms or treatment options.

While being a great source of positive support, at the end of the day, this advice or information on mental health on social media is not sourced from mental health professionals; instead, this is largely driven by users’ conversations. This makes people take to faulty self-diagnosis and treatment plans, besides impairing their:

  • Self-esteem
  • Self-satisfaction with life
  • Professional help-seeking behaviors
  • Medication adherence
  • Overall recovery, etc.

Social media portrayal of what is mental health is often skewed as it employs
overwhelmingly dramatic and distorted images of mental illness that emphasize criminality, prejudice, and unpredictability.

It consistently lends to negative stigmas that further propel the decline of one’s emotions, thoughts, and actions. Some mental health advocates even blame the media for promoting stigma and discrimination toward the mentally ill.

Studies also claim that influencers and mental health are negatively linked. Influencer cultures, in general, also promote pseudo-scientific information about health and psychology.

For instance, in recent years, there is a rise in the trend that treats depression as a marketing tool. Influencers promote non-empirical (and, sometimes, dangerous) concepts, remedies, and self-coping strategies surrounding unrealistic lifestyles, self-care, mental health, and so forth.

A good example is the fashion-therapy trend of “dopamine dressing”. This fad, while encouraging us to wear “feel-good clothing”, also triggers habits of impulsive shopping for clothes, compulsive buying disorder (CBD), and pathological hoarding. Another example is the popularization of toxic positivity.

Bettering The Impact Of Internet Culture On Mental Health

Despite its ills, social media platforms like TikTok and influencer culture can also be an important ally in challenging public prejudices surrounding mental health.

Such platforms can help initiate public debate and project positive human stories about people who suffer from mental health conditions. Especially for those who are marginalized or who lack access to mental health resources, such digital education can do wonders.

Moreover, media lobbying and press liaison can also help mental health professionals (MHPs) advocate for the cause of mental welfare, as well as provide a means of improving public education and awareness.

Know More About –

  1. Social Media Addiction
  2. Internet Addiction
  3. Self-Esteem
  1. 5 Ways Social Media Can Kill A Relationship Before It Even Begins
  2. 8 Signs You Need To Stay Away From Social Media
  3. Negative Effects Of Instagram On Mental Health: 7 Ways Instagram Ruins Lives

Spread the love
  • Why Humans Don’t Make Optimal Choices? New Study Reveals

    A new theory of economic decision-making aims to help us…

  • Moderate Digital Media Use Enhances Mental Health In Teenagers, Study Finds

    Researchers at Trinity College Dublin explored the link between optimal…

  • Scrolling Social Media Puts Us In Dissociative State: Study Claims

    Researchers at the University of Washington showed how people dissociate…

  • Same-Sex Parents Too Have Well-Adjusted Children, Study Reveals

    Researchers at the University of Cologne studied child-rearing in same-sex…

  • Sleep Deprivation Makes Us Interpret Facial Expressions More Negatively

    Researchers explored the link between sleep loss and social withdrawal.

  • Brain Tumor And Depression Are Linked, Research Reveals

    Recent studies explore the link between brain tumors and depression.

  • Too Much Self-Confidence Can Affect Our Health, New Study Claims

    Researchers studied the link between overconfident health assessments, doctor visits,…

  • Can Weather Affect Mental Health? Science Says Yes

    Researchers at WHO confirm the link between climate change and…

  • ‘Hookup Culture’ Is Not The Norm In Real College Life, Research Finds

    Researchers provided insight into early relationship development in hookup culture.

  • Compared To Men, Women Have A Better Sense Of Taste And Smell: Study

    Compared To Men, Women Have A Better Sense Of Taste And Smell: Study

    Researchers at Yale University found that women have a better…

  • Racial Prejudice Worsens Health Outcomes, Study Claims

    Researchers examined the link between racial prejudice and community health…

  • Men And Women Dream Very Differently, Study Reveals

    Dr. Jennie Parker, of the University of the West of…

  • Rising Concerns For Student Athletes’ Mental Health

    Experts recommend ways to better student-athletes mental health crises in…

  • Study Reveals How Our Brain Responds To Surprising Events

    Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) revealed how…

  • The Link Between Mental Health And Gun Violence

    Experts provide insight into how mental health and gun violence…

  • Ruby Barker, Of Netflix’s Bridgerton Fame, Opens Up About Her Trauma And Mental Health Struggles

    Ruby Barker, the Netflix star hospitalized for mental health issues,…

  • You Can “Steer” Your Dark Triad Personality Towards Agreeableness, Study Finds

    Researchers explored ways to reduce Dark Triad personality traits.

  • Men Make More Extreme Choices In Life Than Women, Study Finds

    Researchers at Princeton University examined how gender differences in life…

  • Couples With Joint Bank Accounts Last Longer, Study Finds

    Researchers at Cornell University studied the link between joint finances…

  • Johnny Depp and Amber Heard Case: Spotlight On Rare Personality Disorders

    Understanding Amber Heard’s mental health diagnosis of two personality disorders…

  • London Cab Drivers Have Bigger Brains, Study Reveals

    Researchers at University College London, the UK, revealed how British…

  • Heard vs. Depp Trial: Role Of Mental Health In Intimate Relationships

    Experts opine how the recent Johnny Depp vs. Amber Heard…

  • Social Curiosity Fuels Gossip, Study Finds

    German researchers showed how social curiosity fuels gossip.

  • Herschel Walker’s Mental Health Battle With Dissociative Identity Disorder

    How American footballer Herschel Walker battled DID and wrote a…

  • What Natalia Dyer’s “Anorexia” Can Teach Us About Eating Disorders And Body Shaming

    Experts opine how “body speculations” betray the truth about eating…

  • Selma Blair’s Memoir Highlights How Multiple Sclerosis Impacts Our Physical And Mental Health

    How Hollywood actress Selma Blair reignited the conversation around multiple…

  • Why Do Older People Dream In Black And White?

    A team of American researchers explored why our dreams have…