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Are health influencers making us sick?

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Bad Influence: How the Internet Hijacked Our Health Deborah Cohen Viking (2026)

Previously, when you felt ill, you consulted a doctor. Now, you consult the Internet. In 2025, nearly 80% of US adults said that they were likely to look online for answers to a health question, according to one survey (see go.nature.com/4qzhgiv). And 75% of 18–29-year-olds report using social media for health information and advice (see go.nature.com/4bqlcuw).

How online misinformation exploits ‘information voids’ — and what to do about it

In Bad Influence, medically trained journalist Deborah Cohen examines the problems and opportunities that arise from this shift. She is well positioned to analyse the impacts, having a stellar track record of exposing questionable medical claims and practices that are poorly supported by evidence from research. Her deeply reported, compelling analysis lays bare how social-media influencers, apps, algorithms and the rest of the digital ecosystem are transforming our health, for better or — often — for worse.

Cohen says she tried to keep an open mind when researching the book. She is careful to acknowledge that the Internet has helped to empower and inform individuals by democratizing medical knowledge, and that there is a shortage of rigorous research showing that online information can change people’s behaviour and health.

Nevertheless, she uncovers an ocean of “health information being put onto and shaped by what are — for all intents and purposes — shopping and advertising platforms”. Social-media platforms typically have business models that rely on keeping users on screens. Content creators are incentivized to produce attention-grabbing posts and collaborate with pharmaceutical and other health-related firms.

Filling the gaps

Take attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), for example. Diagnoses for this condition are rising in many countries, on which I have reported previously (Nature 647, 836–840; 2025). ADHD is one of the hottest health topics on social media; some ADHD influencers who post about their condition have giant followings of several million people.

Raising awareness of ADHD has benefits. Influencers and discussions on social media have helped people to recognize and seek help for symptoms — of inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity — that they’ve long struggled with, and to find effective treatments and a supportive network. Social-media communities have fuelled the neurodiversity movement, which typically frames ADHD as a difference or identity rather than solely a disorder. They have also highlighted common symptoms that are not captured in conventional diagnostic criteria1.

Nature Outlook: ADHD

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