2022
DOI: 10.1177/08901171221132113
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Video clips of the Mediterranean Diet on YouTube TM: A social Media Content Analysis

Abstract: Purpose The present study conducted a social media content analysis on videos describing the Mediterranean Diet (MedDiet) posted onYouTube. Setting YouTube TM online video sharing and social media platform. Method Three independent content experts evaluated 141 YouTube videos on the MedDiet in August 2020 utilizing standard rubric and protocol. Data abstracted include media source(s) of posted videos, and viewer exposure/engagement metrics. Information quality was measured by each content expert independently … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In our study, the most common video type was videos containing general information about agoraphobia, while the others were experienced and anxiety-coping videos, respectively. In previous Youtube TM content analyses, it has been seen that the content distributions vary according to the fields and topics, but the videos containing general information constitute a significant majority [15,[18][19][20]. Although the number of daily views and likes of the videos varies according to the popularity of the subject being researched, the number of likes and views of the videos in our research is similar to previous research [7,21].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…In our study, the most common video type was videos containing general information about agoraphobia, while the others were experienced and anxiety-coping videos, respectively. In previous Youtube TM content analyses, it has been seen that the content distributions vary according to the fields and topics, but the videos containing general information constitute a significant majority [15,[18][19][20]. Although the number of daily views and likes of the videos varies according to the popularity of the subject being researched, the number of likes and views of the videos in our research is similar to previous research [7,21].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Taken together with our findings on food literacy and diet quality, this study does suggest that dietary and nutrition information obtained from websites of government and medical manufacturers and books and magazines would be relatively high in quality and usefulness, whereas information obtained from television (and video sites) would be relatively low in quality and useless. This interpretation is generally consistent with previous studies on the quality of nutrition-related information [13,[68][69][70][71][72][73][74]. Nevertheless, no empirical evidence on the quality of web-based or offline dietary and nutrition information written in Japanese is available, and such investigations are warranted [17].…”
Section: Comparison With Prior Worksupporting
confidence: 88%
“…The view of the Mediterranean diet as a healthy diet has not been adequately conveyed to communities within the US. YouTube and Twitter (“X”) messages aimed at promoting the Mediterranean diet also add to the confusion with mixed messaging and inconsistent information [ 154 , 155 ]. The Mediterranean diet has been perceived as unhealthy [ 16 ] and the food components of the diet are regarded as unfamiliar and unacceptable to individuals in racial and ethnic minority populations that have different food cultures, cooking styles and that employ different food components in their meals.…”
Section: Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%