The Claim
As of August 2025, short videos about myocardial infarction on TikTok and Bilibili predominantly cover clinical presentation, etiology, and treatment, while epidemiology and prevention content are severely underrepresented, with 4.25% and 15.03% of videos addressing these topics respectively, resulting in limited public understanding of long-term risk management and disease prevention.
What the research says
Supports is higher
Support is ahead, but a single strong opposing study can change this.
These are independent scores, not a percentage. Higher-grade studies count more, so a single strong opposing study can outweigh several weaker ones.
As of August 2025, most short videos about heart attacks on TikTok and Bilibili focus on symptoms, causes, and treatments, but very few explain how to prevent heart attacks or understand population-level risk, with only 4.25% of videos covering prevention and 15.03% covering epidemiology.
See the scientific wording
Short videos about myocardial infarction on TikTok and Bilibili, as of August 2025, predominantly cover clinical presentation, etiology, and treatment, while epidemiology and prevention content are severely underrepresented, with only 4.25% and 15.03% of videos addressing these topics respectively, limiting public understanding of long-term risk management and disease prevention.
What the research says
1 studyThe study found that almost all short videos about heart attacks on TikTok and Bilibili talk about symptoms and emergency treatment, but very few explain how to prevent heart attacks or understand long-term risks — exactly what the claim says.
Score breakdown, mechanism chain, raw evidence, ideal studies needed & 1 supporting studies
Not medical advice. For informational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making health decisions.