“I’m so #OCD”: A Content Analysis of How Women Portray OCD on TikTok

Erin E. Woods, Alexandra Gantt‐Howrey, A. Pope
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Abstract

To better understand how women portray obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) on social media, we conducted a critical content analysis of TikTok videos. We examined a sample of 50 TikTok videos tagged with “#OCD” that were created by women, yielding two themes and multiple subthemes: 1) minimizes OCD symptoms and 1a) uses OCD as a synonym for cleanliness and organization ; 2) accurately depicts OCD symptoms, 2a) corrects misunderstanding , and 2b) shares obsessive fears . Results revealed that TikToks perpetuating stigma about OCD were prevalent, though women also posted TikToks presenting OCD in more accurate and comprehensive ways. Implications for mental health counselors are explained.
“我太强迫症了”:TikTok上女性如何描述强迫症的内容分析
为了更好地了解女性如何在社交媒体上描绘强迫症(OCD),我们对TikTok视频进行了批判性内容分析。我们检查了50个由女性制作的带有“#OCD”标签的TikTok视频样本,产生了两个主题和多个子主题:1)尽量减少强迫症症状,1a)将强迫症作为清洁和组织的代名词;2)准确描述强迫症症状,2a)纠正误解,2b)分享强迫性恐惧。结果显示,尽管女性也以更准确和全面的方式发布了展示强迫症的tiktok,但tiktok仍然普遍存在对强迫症的偏见。解释了对心理健康咨询师的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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