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Tons of AI-generated health 'tips' on TikTok and YouTube are misleading or fake. Here is how teens can spot the bad ones.
AI-generated health content is everywhere on social media. Some is fine. A lot is wrong, dangerous, or designed to sell you something. Knowing how to spot it protects you.
Find one health claim on social media that seems suspicious. With a parent, check it against a trusted source (CDC, your doctor, Mayo Clinic). What did the trusted source say? Different from the social media claim?
Try this with a school, hobby, or family example where the stakes are low. Use the AI output as a draft you can question, not as the final answer.
15 questions · take it digitally for instant feedback at tendril.neural-forge.io/learn/quiz/end-builders-healthcare-AI-research-claims
Which of the following is the best indicator that a health post on social media might be trustworthy?
A social media post claims 'Doctors hate this one weird trick that cures diabetes.' What warning sign suggests this might be AI-generated misinformation?
What does the term 'health misinformation' refer to?
Why is it dangerous to follow health advice from an anonymous social media account with no identifiable human creator?
Your friend shares a TikTok video claiming a 'natural cure' for cancer. The video says doctors only want your money. What should you do?
Which of the following is an example of a trusted source for health information?
What does it mean to 'verify' a health claim from social media?
A social media post shows blurry stock images of a doctor and makes amazing health claims. Why might this be AI-generated content?
Why should health content from random social media accounts be treated as entertainment rather than advice?
What is the main reason AI-generated health content spreads so quickly on social media?
You see a health claim on Instagram that seems surprising. What is the safest first step?
Why is peer-reviewed research important when evaluating health claims?
Which of these is a red flag suggesting health content might be AI-generated misinformation?
The lesson states that health content from 'random accounts' should be treated as what?
A TikTok video claims that drinking lemon water cures all diseases. The creator has no name, no credentials, and uses the same video clip as dozens of other accounts. What is the biggest concern?