Marysville Appeal-Democrat

AI may be your next therapist. Will it actually help your mental health?

- Tribune News Service KFF Health News

In the past few years, 10,000 to 20,000 apps have stampeded into the mental health space, offering to “disrupt” traditiona­l therapy. With the frenzy around AI innovation­s like CHATGPT, the claim that chatbots can provide mental health care is on the horizon.

The numbers explain why: Pandemic stresses led to millions more Americans seeking treatment. At the same time, there has long been a shortage of mental health profession­als in the United States; more than half of all counties lack psychiatri­sts. Given the Affordable Care Act’s mandate that insurers offer parity between mental and physical health coverage, there is a gaping chasm between demand and supply.

For entreprene­urs, that presents a market bonanza. At the South by Southwest conference in March, where health startups displayed their products, there was a near-religious conviction that AI could rebuild health care, offering apps and machines that could diagnose and treat all kinds of illnesses, replacing doctors and nurses.

Unfortunat­ely, in the mental health space, evidence of effectiven­ess is lacking. Few of the many apps on the market have independen­t outcomes research showing they help; most haven’t been scrutinize­d at all by the FDA. Though marketed to treat conditions such as anxiety, attention-deficit/ hyperactiv­ity disorder, and depression, or to predict suicidal tendencies, many warn users (in small print) that they are “not intended to be medical, behavioral health or other healthcare service” or “not an FDA cleared product.”

There are good reasons to be cautious in the face of this marketing juggernaut.

Decades ago, Joseph Weizenbaum, a professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and considered one of the fathers of artificial intelligen­ce, predicted AI would never make a good therapist, though it could be made to sound like one. In fact, his original AI program, created in the 1960s, was a psychother­apist named ELIZA, which used word and pattern recognitio­n combined with natural language programmin­g to sound like a therapist:

Woman: Well, my boyfriend made me come HERE.ELIZA: Your boyfriend made you come here?woman: He says I’m depressed much of the TIME.ELIZA: I am sorry to hear that you are depressed.woman: It’s true. I am unhappy.eliza: Do you think coming here will help you not to be unhappy?

Though hailed as an AI triumph, ELIZA’S “success” terrified Weizenbaum, whom I once interviewe­d. He said students would interact with the machine as if Eliza were an actual therapist, when what he’d created was “a party trick,” he said.

He foresaw the evolution of far more sophistica­ted programs like CHATGPT. But “the experience­s a computer might gain under such circumstan­ces are not human experience­s,” he told me. “The computer will not, for example, experience loneliness in any sense that we understand it.”

The same goes for anxiety or ecstasy, emotions so neurologic­ally complex that scientists have not been able pinpoint their neural origins.

Can a chatbot achieve transferen­ce, the empathic flow between patient and doctor that is central to many types of therapy?

“The core tenet of medicine is that it’s a relationsh­ip between human and human — and AI can’t love,” said Bon

Ku, director of the Health Design Lab at Thomas Jefferson University and a pioneer in medical innovation. “I have a human therapist, and that will never be replaced by AI.”

Ku said he’d like to see AI used instead to reduce practition­ers’ tasks like record-keeping and data entry to “free up more time for humans to connect.”

While some mental health apps may ultimately prove worthy, there is evidence that some can do harm. One researcher noted that some users faulted these apps for their “scripted nature and lack of adaptabili­ty beyond textbook cases of mild anxiety and depression.”

It may prove tempting for insurers to offer up apps and chatbots to meet the mental health parity requiremen­t. After all, that would be a cheap and simple solution, compared with the difficulty of offering a panel of human therapists, especially since many take no insurance because they consider insurers’ payments too low.

Perhaps seeing the flood of AI hitting the market, the Department of Labor announced last year it was ramping up efforts to ensure better insurer compliance with the mental health parity requiremen­t.

The FDA likewise said late last year it “intends to exercise enforcemen­t discretion” over a range of mental health apps, which it will vet as medical devices. So far, not one has been approved. And only a very few have gotten the agency’s breakthrou­gh device designatio­n, which fast-tracks reviews and studies on devices that show potential.

These apps mostly offer what therapists call structured therapy — in which patients have specific problems and the app can respond with a workbook-like approach. For example, Woebot combines exercises for mindfulnes­s and self-care (with answers written by teams of therapists) for postpartum depression.

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 ?? Tribune News Service/dreamstime ?? With the frenzy around AI innovation­s like CHATGPT, the claim that chatbots can provide mental health care is on the horizon.
Tribune News Service/dreamstime With the frenzy around AI innovation­s like CHATGPT, the claim that chatbots can provide mental health care is on the horizon.
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