DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Health, Which Ingests Your Entire Medical Records, But Warns Not to Use It for “Diagnosis or Treatment”

January 9, 2026
in News
OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Health, Which Ingests Your Entire Medical Records, But Warns Not to Use It for “Diagnosis or Treatment”

AI chatbots may be explosively popular, but they’re known to dispense some seriously wacky— and potentially dangerous — health advice, in a flood of easily accessible misinformation that has alarmed experts.

Their advent has turned countless users into armchair experts, who often end up relying on obsolete, misattributed, or completely made-up advice.

A recent investigation by The Guardian, for instance, found that Google’s AI Overviews, which accompany most search results pages, doled out plenty of inaccurate health information that could lead to grave health risks if followed.

But seemingly unperturbed by experts’ repeated warnings that AI’s health advice shouldn’t be trusted, OpenAI is doubling down by launching a new feature called ChatGPT Health, which will ingest your medical records to generate responses “more relevant and useful to you.”

Yet despite being “designed in close collaboration with physicians” and built on “strong privacy, security, and data controls,” the feature is “designed to support, not replace, medical care.” In fact, it’s shipping with a ludicrously self-defeating caveat: that the bespoke health feature is “not intended for diagnosis or treatment.”

“ChatGPT Health helps people take a more active role in understanding and managing their health and wellness — while supporting, not replacing, care from clinicians,” the company’s website reads.

In reality, users are certain to use it for exactly the type of health advice that OpenAI is warning against in the fine print, which is likely to bring fresh new embarrassments for the company.

It’ll only be heightening existing problems for the company. As Business Insider reports, ChatGPT is “making amateur lawyers and doctors out of everyone,” to the dismay of legal and medical professionals.

Miami-based medical malpractice attorney Jonathan Freidin told the publication that people will use chatbots like ChatGPT to fill out his firm’s client contact sheet.

“We’re seeing a lot more callers who feel like they have a case because ChatGPT or Gemini told them that the doctors or nurses fell below the standard of care in multiple different ways,” he said. “While that may be true, it doesn’t necessarily translate into a viable case.”

Then there’s the fact that users are willing to surrender medical histories, including highly sensitive and personal information — a decision that OpenAI is now encouraging with ChatGPT Health — despite federal law, like HIPAA, not applying to consumer AI products.

Case in point, billionaire Elon Musk encouraged people last year to upload their medical data to his ChatGPT competitor Grok, leading to a flood of confusion as users received hallucinated diagnoses after sharing their X-rays and PET scans.

Given the AI industry’s track record when it comes to privacy protection and struggles with significant data leaks, all these risks are as pertinent as ever.

“New AI health tools offer the promise of empowering patients and promoting better health outcomes, but health data is some of the most sensitive information people can share and it must be protected,” Center for Democracy and Technology senior counsel Andrew Crawford told the BBC.

“Especially as OpenAI moves to explore advertising as a business model, it’s crucial that separation between this sort of health data and memories that ChatGPT captures from other conversations is airtight,” he added. “Since it’s up to each company to set the rules for how health data is collected, used, shared, and stored, inadequate data protections and policies can put sensitive health information in real danger.”

“ChatGPT is only bound by its own disclosures and promises, so without any meaningful limitation on that, like regulation or a law, ChatGPT can change the terms of its service at any time,” Electronic Privacy Information Center senior counsel Sara Geoghegan told The Record.

Then there are concerns over highly sensitive data, like reproductive health information, being passed on to the police against the user’s wishes.

“How does OpenAI handle [law enforcement] requests?” Crawford told The Record. “Do they just turn over the information? Is the user in any way informed?”

“There’s lots of questions there that I still don’t have great answers to,” he added.

More on AI and health advice: Google’s AI Overviews Caught Giving Dangerous “Health” Advice

The post OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Health, Which Ingests Your Entire Medical Records, But Warns Not to Use It for “Diagnosis or Treatment” appeared first on Futurism.

Trump order says Venezuelan oil revenue is being held by the U.S. for ‘governmental and diplomatic purposes’ and not subject to private claims
News

Trump order says Venezuelan oil revenue is being held by the U.S. for ‘governmental and diplomatic purposes’ and not subject to private claims

by Fortune
January 10, 2026

President Donald Trump’s new executive order on Venezuelan oil revenue is meant to ensure that the money remains protected from ...

Read more
News

See the list of California’s 200-plus billionaires who could be hit by the proposed wealth tax

January 10, 2026
News

Monkeys Are on the Loose in St. Louis, City Officials Say

January 10, 2026
News

Trump Is ‘Chest-Beating’ Over a Retreat

January 10, 2026
News

Stewart Cheifet, Host of TV’s ‘Computer Chronicles,’ Dies at 87

January 10, 2026
Surprising reason why Ashley Tisdale, Vanessa Hudgens stopped speaking years before ‘toxic’ mom group drama

Surprising reason why Ashley Tisdale, Vanessa Hudgens stopped speaking years before ‘toxic’ mom group drama

January 10, 2026
Russia, Iran and China join naval drill in South Africa, as tensions with US rise: ‘A pawn in the power games’

Russia, Iran and China join naval drill in South Africa, as tensions with US rise: ‘A pawn in the power games’

January 10, 2026
Pittsburgh just sent a chilling warning for American democracy

Pittsburgh just sent a chilling warning for American democracy

January 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025