Content area

Abstract

ABSTRACT

Background

Social media influencers are powerful storytellers who function as conduits of public health communication and may contribute significantly to young people's mental health literacy. Influencers who discuss mental health include health professionals, wellness practitioners and experts by lived experience. As yet, there has been no multimodal analysis of how these three influencer types narrate mental health issues. This study critically evaluates 398 TikTok videos to show how three distinct types of influencers construct multimodal narratives around mental health.

Methods

Data was collected using the TikTok Research API and annotated for narrative patterns and visual formatting using an inductively created multimodal framework.

Results

The analysis shows important differences between the storytelling practices of health professionals, who inform others through talking head explainers, enactments and stitches, and lived experience influencers who invited shared perspectives on their stories of illness, treatment and recovery through compilations and ‘watch as I do this’ formats. Wellness practitioners occupy an interdiscursive mid‐space, blending the verbal aspects of ‘informing’ (explainers) with the visual narration of ‘shared experience’ to promote solutions through recommendation and advertising. The data also highlights similarities between the health professionals and wellness influencers in their use of marketing calls to action, indicating the commercialisation of mental health solutions offered in TikTok videos.

Conclusions

It is concerning that the gap between information and support provided on TikTok may lead to partial and imbalanced development of mental health literacy by adolescent users and that content provided by certain influencer types mimics authoritative and authentic communication but promotes non‐medical solutions to mental health, unsupported by evidence.

Patient or Public Involvement

Twelve young people with lived experience of mental health challenges, aged between 16 and 25, were recruited through The McPin Foundation to form the young people's advisory group (YPAG) for the project. This age range incorporates adolescents and ‘emerging adults’ who are likely to experience a range of life transitions and encounter challenges in mental health. The group met remotely four times during the study, helping to define the categories of influencers, refining the narrative categories and visual formats for the code book and discussing data examples openly to guide the analysis. Two members of the YPAG were trained and participated as coders in the inter‐rater reliability process.

Details

1009240
Company / organization
Title
Multimodal Analysis of Stories Told by Mental Health Influencers on TikTok
Author
Christiansen, Alex 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Craythorne, Shioma‐Lei 2 ; Crawford, Paul 3 ; Larkin, Michael 2 ; Gohil, Aalok 4 ; Strutt, Spencer 4 ; Page, Ruth 1 

 University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK 
 Aston University, Birmingham, UK 
 University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK 
 The McPin Foundation, London, UK 
Publication title
Volume
28
Issue
3
Number of pages
13
Publication year
2025
Publication date
Jun 1, 2025
Section
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Place of publication
Oxford
Country of publication
United States
Publication subject
ISSN
13696513
e-ISSN
13697625
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Journal Article
Publication history
 
 
Online publication date
2025-04-24
Milestone dates
2025-02-10 (manuscriptRevised); 2025-04-24 (publishedOnlineFinalForm); 2024-12-05 (manuscriptReceived); 2025-02-28 (manuscriptAccepted)
Publication history
 
 
   First posting date
24 Apr 2025
ProQuest document ID
3224392198
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/multimodal-analysis-stories-told-mental-health/docview/3224392198/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
© 2025. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the "License"). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
Last updated
2025-11-07
Database
2 databases
  • Coronavirus Research Database
  • ProQuest One Academic