TikTok Skincare Trends Are Ruining Your Face

Gary C

Senior Member.
IMO This follows from the fundamental flaw in social media, the endless need to generate new content in order to maintain revenue despite not having any useful new information to share.

External Quote:
RESULTS
Content creator ages ranged from 7 to 18 years. Each video reviewed had an average of 1.1 million views. Regimens featured an average of 6 products, costing an average of $168/regimen. Only one-quarter of videos (26.2%) included sunscreen. The top 25 most-viewed videos contained an average of 11 and a maximum of 21 potentially irritating active ingredients. Twenty of the inactive ingredients are included in the Pediatric Baseline Series."
The study - https://publications.aap.org/pediat...202103/Pediatric-Skin-Care-Regimens-on-TikTok
 
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External Quote:
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES

A recent trend in video-based online content features girls as young as 7 years demonstrating multistep skin care regimens, which may be affecting pediatric skin care practices. We aimed to conduct a systematic analysis of TikTok videos featuring skin care regimens with content creators aged 18 years or younger.

METHODS

Two investigators each created a new TikTok account, reporting themselves to be 13 years old. The "For You" tab was used to view relevant content until 100 unique videos were compiled. We collected demographics of content creators, number and types of products used, and total cost of regimens. We created a list of products used and their active and inactive ingredients. The Pediatric Baseline Series used in patch testing was used to identify ingredients with elevated risk of inducing allergic contact dermatitis.

RESULTS

Content creator ages ranged from 7 to 18 years. Each video reviewed had an average of 1.1 million views. Regimens featured an average of 6 products, costing an average of $168/regimen. Only one-quarter of videos (26.2%) included sunscreen. The top 25 most-viewed videos contained an average of 11 and a maximum of 21 potentially irritating active ingredients. Twenty of the inactive ingredients are included in the Pediatric Baseline Series.

CONCLUSIONS

Skin care regimens on TikTok are costly, infrequently include sunscreen, and often involve exposure to ingredients that carry a risk of irritation, allergic contact dermatitis, and sun sensitivity. They offer little to no benefit for the pediatric populations they are targeting.

 
People are getting stupider, because attention span does not extend beyond the next TikTok or Facebook feed...
this thread (except Mendel's post) is contributing to the lack of attention skills, as readers just have to read the click baity statements here without reading any actual data.
 
this thread (except Mendel's post) is contributing to the lack of attention skills, as readers just have to read the click baity statements here without reading any actual data.

The people who buy the products are not the ones reading the data in the pediatric journals. They are the ones reading click bait 'influencers' on TikTok.
 
No, they ARE the products.
Yeah, my daughters got into all this nonsense before they were teenagers. They didn't have access to Tik Tok, I just put it down to influences from friends etc., then I saw one of the young girls on those YouTube channels (that's another horrible area) promoting a brand called Drunk Elephant (which is supposed to be a premium brand).
It's a bit like the self help industry in a way, if the first one you tried/read works then you shouldn't need the constant latest thing.
 
Yeah, my daughters got into all this nonsense before they were teenagers. They didn't have access to Tik Tok, I just put it down to influences from friends etc., then I saw one of the young girls on those YouTube channels (that's another horrible area) promoting a brand called Drunk Elephant (which is supposed to be a premium brand).
It's a bit like the self help industry in a way, if the first one you tried/read works then you shouldn't need the constant latest thing.
i think Sephora was the first one i heard about being viral. and i saw those from tv commercials (well technically streaming commercials, if those are different).
 
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