Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 24
Doctor Turns to ChatGPT After High Blood Test Numbers Draw Generic Advice
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 24

Doctor Turns to ChatGPT After High Blood Test Numbers Draw Generic Advice

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 24
  • Several blood test readings that had been rising for years pushed a doctor-patient to seek help from ChatGPT after their physician responded with only “continued diet and exercise.”
  • ChatGPT stood out less for medical novelty than for personalization: it asked about daily routines, weighed realistic behavior changes and tailored advice to what the user could actually do.
  • One concrete suggestion — a short walk right after eating — felt more actionable than prior guidance, while the bot said longer activity would likely add only marginal benefit.
  • The essay argues that AI’s appeal in medicine may come from restoring the attentive, empathetic interaction patients increasingly struggle to get from time-pressed clinicians.
Can AI assistants fix doctor burnout and restore the personal connection lost in modern healthcare?
With a third of adults using AI for health, is this the future of care or a public health disaster?