Commentary

TikTok offers to ‘balance your hormones’ are pure hokum


 

With more than 306 million views, #hormonebalance and #hormonebalancing are among the latest hacks to take over the social media platform TikTok, on which users post short videos. Influencers offer advice such as eating raw carrots for “happy hormones,” eating protein followed by fat for breakfast to regulate blood glucose, or taking vitamin B2 supplements for thyroid health.

Have you ever wondered if you were asleep during the lecture on “hormone balancing” in medical school? No, you weren’t. It was never a class for good reason, and you didn’t fail to read any such breakthrough studies in The New England Journal of Medicine either.

Although the sound bites no doubt garner attention among TikTok users, “hormone balancing” is a fictional term that is practically meaningless.

There are over 50 different hormones produced by humans and animals, regulating sleep, growth, metabolism and reproduction, among many other biological processes, so there is certainly no one-size-fits-all solution to ensure these are all working in perfect harmony.

When someone mentions “hormone balancing,” my mind wanders to the last time I took my car to have my tires rotated and balanced. If only it were as simple to balance hormones in real life. The best we can hope for is to get a specific hormone within the ideal physiologic range for that person’s age.

The term “hormone” can mean many things to different people. When a woman comes in with a hormone question, for example, it is often related to estrogen, followed by thyroid hormones. A wealth of misinformation exists in popular literature regarding these hormones alone.

Estrogen can be replaced, but not everyone needs it replaced. It depends on variables including age, underlying medical conditions, the time of day a test was drawn, and concomitant medications. Having low levels of a given hormone does not necessarily call for replacement either.

Insulin is another example of a hormone that can never completely be replaced in people with diabetes in a way that exactly mimics the normal physiologic release.

There are many lesser-known hormones that are measurable and replaceable but are also more difficult to reset to original manufacturer specifications.

A Google search for “hormone balancing” often sends you to “naturopaths” or “integrative medicine” practitioners, who often propose similar solutions to the TikTok influencers. Users are told that their hormones are out of whack and that restoring this “balance” can be achieved by purchasing whatever “natural products” or concoction they are selling.

These TikTok videos and online “experts” are the home-brewed versions of the strip-mall hormone specialists. TikTok videos claiming to help “balance hormones” typically don’t name a specific hormone either, or the end organs that each would have an impact on. Rather, they lump all hormones into a monolithic entity, implying that there is a single solution for all health problems. And personal testimonials extolling the benefits of a TikTok intervention don’t constitute proof of efficacy no matter how many “likes” they get. These influencers assume that viewers can “sense” their hormones are out of tune and no lab tests can convince them otherwise.

In these inflationary times, the cost of seeking medical care from conventional channels is increasingly prohibitive. It’s easy to understand the appeal of getting free advice from TikTok or some other Internet site. At best, following the advice will not have much impact; at worst, it could be harmful.

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