Connect with us

Business

Is ChatGPT Health Reliable? Study Finds It ‘Underestimating’ Health Concerns, Emergencies

Published

on

MacBook Neo

ChatGPT Health debuted in January to provide a generative AI companion for all health needs, but researchers have recently conducted a study to test its capabilities and reliability.

While there are several good qualities to the special version of the chatbot, the researchers found in their study that it downplayed various medical concerns and emergencies that should immediately warrant a trip to the emergency room.

ChatGPT Health: Study Finds It ‘Underestimating’ Concerns

A study conducted by researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai claims that they have conducted the first independent safety evaluation of ChatGPT Health, OpenAI’s specialized chatbot for medical concerns.

Here, the researchers found that ChatGPT Health has “underestimated” several medical concerns and possible emergencies from questions or scenarios raised by the researchers. In the study, the researchers assessed the capabilities of the chatbot to perform “triage,” the way medical professionals assess the patient, their state, and what they feel.

Advertisement

According to Gizmodo, instead of ChatGPT Health immediately directing patients to the emergency room, the chatbot suggested that they monitor their condition first for around one to two days. This happened for concerns like diabetic ketoacidosis and impending respiratory failure.

According to the study, this is despite ChatGPT Health already identifying the symptoms as early warning signs, particularly in the case of respiratory failure.

That said, for “textbook emergencies,” the chatbot did more triage. However, they also noted that ChatGPT Health failed in situations where it matters most.

Is ChatGPT Health Reliable For Concerns, Emergencies?

Previous studies have been done to test ChatGPT’s knowledge in the medical field, and it was found that it was not perfect in its capacity to provide advice or information.

Advertisement

While the chatbot may be able to answer your queries about a disease, illness, or condition, the recent study from the Icahn School of Medicine only showed that it is not yet fully reliable.

ChatGPT Health still has a lot to improve on, with studies like these looking to help improve its systems and raise awareness among the public.

Originally published on Tech Times

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

Fall in Welsh business confidence shows new Lloyds research

Published

on

Business Live

The level of confidence amongst Welsh firms is lower than for the UK as a whole.

(Image: PA)

Business confidence in Wales fell in February according to the latest business barometer from Lloyds.

Companies in Wales reported lower confidence in their own business prospects month-on-month, down three points at 35%. When taken alongside their optimism in the economy, down five points to 22%, this gives a headline confidence reading of 29% ( compared to 32% in January). Anything above a zero reading is positive and anything below negative.

Advertisement

Looking ahead to the next six months, Welsh businesses identified their top target areas for growth as investing in their team, for example through training (71%), evolving their offering, for instance by introducing new products or services (52%) and entering new markets (29%).

For the UK as a whole business confidence was unchanged since January at 44%.

READ MORE: Car insurance to loans group Admiral post record profitsREAD MORE: Deloitte appoints new senior partner for the South West and Wales

Firms’ confidence in their own trading prospects fell six points to 53%, but their optimism in the wider economy rose eight points to 36%.

Advertisement

London was the most confident UK nation or region in February (59%), followed by the north east (58%) and Northern Ireland (58%).

The construction sector saw strong gains in overall confidence. In February, confidence was up 14 points to 60%, with manufacturing also seeing a boost, up five points to 37%. Confidence for retail and service sector firms softened slightly, each down two and three points respectively.

Nathan Morgan, area director for Wales at Lloyds, said: “While business confidence dipped this month, we know Welsh businesses are continuing to press ahead with their growth strategies.

“Whether their plans are to upskill their teams, enter new markets or diversify product and service offerings, we’ll continue to be ready to provide our support.”

Advertisement

Hann-Ju Ho, senior economist, Lloyds Commercial Banking, said: “It’s encouraging to see optimism in the wider economy returning, although with a small reduction in firms’ confidence in their own trading prospects. The majority of the survey results were collected following the Bank of England’s close decision to hold interest rates at its February meeting, signalling potential easing ahead, which may have alleviated business concerns, including those around cost pressures. While the rise in pricing expectations to a six month high may indicate firms are looking to rebuild their margins in 2026.

“It’s also great to see confidence increase for manufacturers and construction firms as they are key for UK growth.”

Continue Reading

Business

Home sellers are re-listing properties at the fastest pace in a decade

Published

on

Home sellers are re-listing properties at the fastest pace in a decade

A “For Sale” sign outside a house in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025.

Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The all-important spring housing market is off and running, and while the pace isn’t expected to be strong, there are signs of optimism, at least among sellers. Some who gave up last year are jumping back in.

Advertisement

Nearly 45,000 homes that were delisted last year were relisted for sale in January, according to Redfin, a real estate brokerage. That is the highest January figure since Redfin began tracking this metric a decade ago and represents a record 3.6% of homes that were on the market in January.

The January figures come as Redfin reported a record number of sellers pulling their homes off the market last September. Close to 85,000 sellers delisted, up 28% from September 2024. Higher mortgage rates last year, still-high home prices and growing uncertainty in the economy sidelined buyers last fall, taking sellers out of the driver’s seat, where they had been in the years during and just after the pandemic.

Get Property Play directly to your inbox

CNBC’s Property Play with Diana Olick covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, delivered weekly to your inbox.

Subscribe here to get access today.

Advertisement

Ashley Rummage, a real estate agent in Raleigh, North Carolina, in response to CNBC’s fourth-quarter Housing Market Survey, said in December that more sellers were being asked for concessions, and some just refused.

“A lot of sellers I’ve encountered and worked with have just thrown their hands up in the air and said, ‘If we can’t get what we want for our house right now, or what we think is it’s worth, then we’re gonna go ahead and take it off to market and try again, maybe in the spring,’” Rummage said.

The overall inventory of homes for sale nationally is higher than it was a year ago, but the gains are plateauing, according to Realtor.com. Active listings were up 7.9% in February, year-over-year, but that number has been shrinking for nine straight months. Listings are still down 17% from 2019, pre-pandemic.

“Inventory has improved for more than two years, but the momentum has faltered in recent months,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist, Realtor.com. “Supply gains have been concentrated in the South and West and skewed toward homes priced below $500,000. While the Northeast and Midwest have seen growth, they remain significantly undersupplied.”

Advertisement

With rates now hovering near four-year lows, Hale said, a key question is whether this “thaw” spurs more buyers or more sellers. Mortgage rates have climbed slightly higher in recent days, due to the ongoing war with Iran and renewed fears over inflation.

Continue Reading

Business

Catalina Crunch adds new products

Published

on

Catalina Crunch adds new products

One product was previously limited edition.

Continue Reading

Business

No HPAI vaccine yet, but research continues

Published

on

No HPAI vaccine yet, but research continues

Grant recipients shared their innovative approaches to managing the current HPAI outbreak.

Continue Reading

Business

CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. (CRWD) Presents at Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference 2026 Transcript

Published

on

OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Q4: 2026-03-03 Earnings Summary

EPS of $1.12 beats by $0.02

 | Revenue of $1.31B (23.32% Y/Y) beats by $7.98M

CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. (CRWD) Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference 2026 March 5, 2026 10:45 AM EST

Company Participants

Burt Podbere – Chief Financial Officer

Advertisement

Conference Call Participants

Meta Marshall – Morgan Stanley, Research Division

Advertisement

Presentation

Meta Marshall
Morgan Stanley, Research Division

All right. Welcome, everybody. We’re going to have a great act to follow here with CrowdStrike, but I’ll read the disclosures first. If any research disclosures that you’re interested in, please see morganstanley.com/researchclosures, or reach out to your sales representative. Delighted to have CrowdStrike here, Burt Podbere, CFO.

Advertisement

Question-and-Answer Session

Meta Marshall
Morgan Stanley, Research Division

Maybe to kick off. We just had Sam on stage. How do you think about everything that Sam said, and how it relates to kind of all the security we’re going to need to protect against that?

Advertisement

Burt Podbere
Chief Financial Officer

Meta, you said it right, they’re going to need security. And we’re here to help. Look, we have a partnership with OpenAI and others. And we’re really excited about what we can do together. And we don’t comment on who our customers are. But certainly, we have a lot of interactions with Sam and the team. So we’re excited to see what the future holds.

Advertisement

Meta Marshall
Morgan Stanley, Research Division

All right. Perfect. All right. We’re going to put on as good of a show. All right.

Burt Podbere
Chief Financial Officer

Advertisement

I’m here to help.

Meta Marshall
Morgan Stanley, Research Division

Exactly. So you reported very strong fiscal Q4 earnings on Tuesday this week. There were a lot of highlights. We saw EDR reaccelerate, continued strong growth across multiple growth pillars, strong traction with Flex. What were some of the most encouraging signs for you versus kind of expectations you had coming into the quarter?

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

HeyNu launches flagship protein bars

Published

on

HeyNu launches flagship protein bars

The bars are formulated with plant-based protein. 

Continue Reading

Business

Better’s new ChatGPT app targets lenders Rocket and UWM

Published

on

Better’s new ChatGPT app targets lenders Rocket and UWM

Vishal Garg, Better.com

Source: Better.com

The online mortgage platform Better has partnered with OpenAI to launch an app within ChatGPT that the companies said will dramatically reduce the time it takes to underwrite a mortgage or home equity loan, CNBC has learned exclusively.

Advertisement

The app, to be announced later Thursday, takes Better’s mortgage engine and combines it with OpenAI’s models to speed up the underwriting process for loan officers working at banks, mortgage brokers and fintech firms, Better CEO Vishal Garg said in an interview.

“Taking the mortgage underwriting process, which so many of us have experienced personally, from 21 days to as little as 47 seconds and enabling it via ChatGPT is a huge unlock for everyone,” Giancarlo Lionetti, OpenAI’s chief commercial officer, said in a statement provided to CNBC. “OpenAI is proud to partner with Better to build technology that revolutionizes the mortgage industry and makes it cheaper, faster, and easier for American families to finance a home.”

For decades, creating a mortgage has been one of the most time-consuming corners of American finance, with lenders relying on dozens of steps that can take weeks to complete. After the 2008 financial crisis, big banks like JPMorgan Chase receded from the U.S. mortgage market, leading to the rise of non-bank players including Rocket Mortgage and United Wholesale Mortgage.

Now, in an era where the leading artificial intelligence firms are targeting inefficiencies across the corporate landscape, it’s possible that AI agents could reshape a U.S. home-loan market that originates more than $1 trillion in mortgages a year.

Advertisement

Garg said the new app is part of Better’s pivot from being primarily a lender to consumers to also becoming a “mortgage-as-a-service” tech platform for other mortgage players.

The companies are taking direct aim at the dominant mortgage players by enabling competitors to move faster, Garg said. According to Better, lenders can save 21 days of time on average, reducing the costs to underwrite loans and ultimately saving consumers money as well.

“AI is now doing mortgages,” Garg said. “Rocket, UWM, Pennymac, a bunch of guys that are large public companies, make their money by effectively charging a tax of one and half percent to underwrite mortgages. … That’s $20 billion that’s paid by the American public in a typical year.”

OpenAI’s models, fed with Better’s mortgage data, save time by simultaneously running parallel workflows on dozens of checkpoints, including appraisals, title reports, income, credit reports and other metrics, Garg said.

Advertisement

“It’s not a simple tool call. It’s a multiple tool call with a super long, extended logic tree and a very large context window,” Garg said.

Continue Reading

Business

BOJ Governor Sticks to Rate-Hike Stance Amid Iran Tensions

Published

on

BOJ Governor Sticks to Rate-Hike Stance Amid Iran Tensions

TOKYO—Bank of Japan Gov. Kazuo Ueda reaffirmed his commitment to further interest-rate increases amid deepening concerns over instability in the Middle East.

“While we intend to carefully monitor the impact of the situation in the Middle East, we believe it is appropriate to continue raising the policy rate and adjusting the degree of monetary accommodation if the economy and prices improve in line with our quarterly outlook,” Ueda said at a parliamentary session Wednesday.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Continue Reading

Business

Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri A.S. 2025 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NYSE:TKC) 2026-03-05

Published

on

OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team

Continue Reading

Business

Royal Caribbean Cruises: Buy On Dips

Published

on

Royal Caribbean Cruises: Buy On Dips

Royal Caribbean Cruises: Buy On Dips

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025