CROHN’S disease Instagram Reels demonstrate comparable quality between medical professionals and non-medical creators, with no association between engagement levels and content accuracy or quality. A review of 78 highly viewed English language videos tagged #Crohn’s found that overall content was of moderate quality and neutral impact, with misinformation present across creator groups.
Study Design and Crohn’s Disease Instagram Reels Evaluation
Researchers assessed Crohn’s disease Instagram Reels to evaluate differences in accuracy and quality between medical professionals and lay individuals. Videos were categorised by creator type and assessed by two independent reviewers. Accuracy was measured using an adapted harm benefit score, while quality was evaluated using Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) benchmark criteria.
The majority of Crohn’s disease Instagram Reels were created by non-medical users at 83% compared with 17% from medical professionals. Medical professionals produced significantly more educational content at 62% vs 23% among non-medical creators.
Accuracy, Engagement, and Content Quality Findings
No significant correlation was identified between engagement metrics and either harm benefit scores or JAMA benchmark criteria scores across Crohn’s disease Instagram Reels. Medical professionals achieved higher JAMA scores compared with non-medical users (2.5 vs 2; p<0.001). However, harm benefit scores were identical between groups (0 vs 0; p=0.9601), indicating no measurable difference in overall accuracy.
Medical advice focused Crohn’s disease Instagram Reels demonstrated the lowest median harm benefit score of -1, with frequent misinformation reported. Notably, 42% of harmful videos were produced by medical professionals, highlighting inconsistency in content reliability even among clinically trained creators.
Implications for Crohn’s Disease Content on Social Media
Overall, Crohn’s disease Instagram Reels showed no link between popularity and accuracy or quality. While medical professionals produced higher quality content by benchmark criteria, this did not translate into improved accuracy. Findings suggest that Crohn’s disease Instagram Reels require critical assessment regardless of creator background, particularly for advice-based content where misinformation remains evident.
Reference
Madabhushi S et al. Scrolling for science: assessing the quality and accuracy of Crohn’s disease-related content on Instagram reels. PLoS One. 2026;21(6):e0350430.
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