What Do Social Media Influencers Say About Birth Control? A Content Analysis of YouTube Vlogs About Birth Control

  • University of Delaware ROR

Health Communication, 38(14), 3336-3345

DOI 10.1080/10410236.2022.2149091 PMID 36642835

Abstract

Youth get their sexual health information from social media, often from social media influencers (SMIs) or microcelebrities with large followings. Previous research suggests that SMIs have powerful persuasive effects on attitudes and behaviors. Thus, it is important to examine the ways in which sexual health information, such as birth control, is conveyed by SMIs. Using framing theory as a theoretical framework, this study examines characteristics of SMIs and their shared experiences pertaining to birth control. A content analysis of YouTube vlogs (n = 50) posted from December 2019-2021 was conducted on SMIs who talk about their experiences using hormonal and non-hormonal birth control. SMI status was determined based on the number of people subscribed to the YouTube channels. Results suggest that SMI YouTube videos are primarily about the discontinuation of hormonal birth control and may provide inaccurate sexual health information. Reasons for discontinuation of hormonal birth control provided by the SMIs are discussed. Future research should explore the effects of influencer sexual health messaging on beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors.

Topics

social media influencers birth control YouTube content analysis, YouTube vlogs hormonal birth control discontinuation reasons, social media sexual health misinformation contraception, influencer framing theory contraceptive messaging, hormonal birth control side effects social media narratives, youth sexual health information social media platforms, birth control discontinuation reasons influencer videos, content analysis YouTube reproductive health education, microcelebrity persuasive effects contraceptive attitudes behaviors, non-hormonal birth control social media promotion
PMID 36642835 36642835 DOI 10.1080/10410236.2022.2149091 10.1080/10410236.2022.2149091

Cite this article

Pfender, E. J., & Devlin, M. M. (2023). What Do Social Media Influencers Say About Birth Control? A Content Analysis of YouTube Vlogs About Birth Control. *Health communication*, *38*(14), 3336-3345. https://doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2022.2149091