EPISODE · Aug 4, 2025 · 1 MIN
Is Your Therapist a Chatbot?
from Young Blood - Men’s Mental Health · host Cal MacPherson
A Stanford study recently found AI chatbots only responded safely to 50% of serious prompts, such as those related to suicidal ideation and psychosis.About 1 in 5 replies were harmful, validating dangerous thoughts. (Stanford, 2024 via NY Post)How many of us are using it?A nationally representative sample survey of U.S adults found 60% have used AI for emotional support.Nearly 50% believe it can be beneficial. (Zhou et al., 2024 & Benda et al., 2024 — JMIR Mental Health) A 2024 Australian study found: • 28% of people have used tools like ChatGPT for mental health support. • 47% described it as ‘like a personal therapist’. (Orygen & JMIR Mental Health, 2024)What’s the appeal? ✅AI is available 24/7 ✅Doesn’t judge ✅Never interrupts ✅Feels private ✅No waitlists ✅Little or no cost It feels like support. But...AI tells you what you want to hear.Chatbots reflect your views, because we like it when we’re agreed with.The more they validate you > the more you trust them > the more you use the program.(Zhou et al., 2024 – JMIR Mental Health)OpenAI admitted a recent update made ChatGPT:More sycophanticMore agreeableMore likely to fuel anger & impulsivityThere’s potential — but protection must be a priority.AI tools can help:Fill service gapsSupport underserved communitiesOffer scalable, low-cost supportReach people who might not seek help otherwiseBut without... ⚠️ Clinical safeguards ⚠️ Human oversight ⚠️ Crisis protocols ⚠️ Ethical boundaries…it can do more harm than good.OpenAI’s CEO has stated confidentiality is a significant concern."Right now, if you talk to a therapist or a lawyer or a doctor about those problems, there's legal privilege for it. There's doctor-patient confidentiality, there's legal confidentiality, whatever. And we haven't figured that out yet for when you talk to ChatGPT.” - Sam Altman
What this episode covers
A Stanford study recently found AI chatbots only responded safely to 50% of serious prompts, such as those related to suicidal ideation and psychosis.About 1 in 5 replies were harmful, validating dangerous thoughts. (Stanford, 2024 via NY Post)How many of us are using it?A nationally representative sample survey of U.S adults found 60% have used AI for emotional support.Nearly 50% believe it can be beneficial. (Zhou et al., 2024 & Benda et al., 2024 — JMIR Mental Health) A 2024 Australian study found: • 28% of people have used tools like ChatGPT for mental health support. • 47% described it as ‘like a personal therapist’. (Orygen & JMIR Mental Health, 2024)What’s the appeal? ✅AI is available 24/7 ✅Doesn’t judge ✅Never interrupts ✅Feels private ✅No waitlists ✅Little or no cost It feels like support. But...AI tells you what you want to hear.Chatbots reflect your views, because we like it when we’re agreed with.The more they validate you > the more you trust them > the more you use the program.(Zhou et al., 2024 – JMIR Mental Health)OpenAI admitted a recent update made ChatGPT:More sycophanticMore agreeableMore likely to fuel anger & impulsivityThere’s potential — but protection must be a priority.AI tools can help:Fill service gapsSupport underserved communitiesOffer scalable, low-cost supportReach people who might not seek help otherwiseBut without... ⚠️ Clinical safeguards ⚠️ Human oversight ⚠️ Crisis protocols ⚠️ Ethical boundaries…it can do more harm than good.OpenAI’s CEO has stated confidentiality is a significant concern."Right now, if you talk to a therapist or a lawyer or a doctor about those problems, there's legal privilege for it. There's doctor-patient confidentiality, there's legal confidentiality, whatever. And we haven't figured that out yet for when you talk to ChatGPT.” - Sam Altman
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Is Your Therapist a Chatbot?
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