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‘Not regulated’: launch of ChatGPT Health in Australia causes concern among experts

about 4 hours ago
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A 60-year-old man with no history of mental illness presented at a hospital emergency department insisting that his neighbour was poisoning him.Over the next 24 hours he had worsening hallucinations, and tried to escape the hospital.Doctors eventually discovered the man was on a daily diet of sodium bromide, an inorganic salt mainly used for industrial and laboratory purposes like cleaning and water treatment.He bought it over the internet after ChatGPT told him he could use it in place of table salt because he was worried about the health impacts of salt in his diet.Sodium bromide can accumulate in the body causing a condition called bromism, with symptoms including hallucinations, stupor and impaired coordination.

It is cases like this that have Alex Ruani, a doctoral researcher in health misinformation with the University College in London, concerned about the launch of ChatGPT Health in Australia.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailA limited number of Australian users can already access the artificial intelligence (AI) platform which allows them to “securely connect medical records and wellness apps” to generate responses “… more relevant and useful to you”.ChatGPT users in Australia can join a waitlist for access.“ChatGPT Health is being presented as an interface that can help people make sense of health information and test results or receive diet advice, while not replacing a clinician,” Ruani said.“The challenge is that, for many users, it’s not obvious where general information ends and medical advice begins, especially when the responses sound confident and personalised, even if they mislead.

”Ruani said there had been too many “horrifying” examples of ChatGPT “leaving out key safety details like side effects, contraindications, allergy warnings, or risks around supplements, foods, diets, or certain practices”,“What worries me is that there are no published studies specifically testing the safety of ChatGPT Health,” Ruani said,“Which user prompts, integration paths, or data sources could lead to misguidance or harmful misinformation?”,ChatGPT is developed by OpenAI, which used the tool HealthBench to develop ChatGPT Health,HealthBench employs doctors to test and evaluate how well AI models perform when responding to health questions.

Ruani said the full methodology used by HealthBench, and its evaluations, are “… mostly undisclosed, rather than outlined in independent peer-reviewed studies”.“ChatGPT Health is not regulated as a medical device or diagnostic tool.So there are no mandatory safety controls, no risk reporting, no post-market surveillance, and no requirement to publish testing data.”An OpenAI spokesperson told Guardian Australia that the company had worked in partnership with more than 200 physicians from 60 countries “to advise and improve the models powering ChatGPT Health”.“ChatGPT Health is a dedicated space where health conversations stay separate from the rest of your chats, with strong privacy protections by default,” the spokesperson said.

ChatGPT Health data is encrypted and subject to privacy protections by default.Sharing with third parties will happen with user consent, or in limited circumstances outlined in OpenAI’s privacy policy.The CEO of the Consumers Health Forum of Australia, Dr Elizabeth Deveny, said rising out-of-pocket medical costs and long wait times to see doctors are driving people to AI.She said ChatGPT Health could be useful in helping people manage well known chronic conditions, and to research ways to stay well.AI’s ability to give answers in different languages “provides a real benefit to people who don’t have English proficiency,” she said.

Deveny is concerned that people will take advice given by ChatGPT Health at face value, and that “large global tech companies are moving faster than governments,” setting their own rules around privacy, transparency and data collection.“This is not a small not-for-profit experimenting in good faith.It’s one of the largest technology companies in the world.“When commercial platforms define the norms, the benefits tend to flow to people who already have resources, education, and system knowledge.The risks fall on those who do not.

”She said a failure of governments to act has left health consumers to navigate the social transformation that is AI largely alone.“We need clear guardrails, transparency and consumer education so people can make informed choices about if and how they use AI for their health,” she said.“This isn’t about stopping AI.It’s about acting before mistakes, bias, and misinformation are replicated at speed and scale, in ways that are almost impossible to unwind.”
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Adelaide festival apologises to Randa Abdel-Fattah and invites her to participate in 2027 writers’ week

The new Adelaide festival board has issued a public apology to Palestinian Australian academic Randa Abdel-Fattah, and has promised she will be invited to Adelaide writers’ week in 2027.Abdel-Fattah immediately accepted the apology, posting on Instagram that it was a vindication “of our collective solidarity and mobilisation against anti-Palestinian racism, bullying and censorship”.She said she was still considering the board’s invitation to appear at the 2027 event.In a statement on Thursday morning, Adelaide Festival Corporation acknowledged they had previously said they would exclude Abdel-Fattah from this year’s event “because it would be culturally insensitive to allow her to participate. We retract that statement”

about 13 hours ago
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Churchill’s desk and rare artwork among items donated to UK cultural institutions

Winston Churchill and Benjamin Disraeli’s desk, a painting by Vanessa Bell and a rare artwork by Edgar Degas are among the items of cultural importance saved for the nation this year.The items, worth a total of £59.7m, will be allocated to museums, galleries, libraries and archives around the UK as part of Art Council England’s cultural gifts and acceptance in lieu schemes.Some items were accepted for their outstanding rarity, cultural value or technical skills, while others offer insights into the UK’s history through some of the nation’s most renowned public figures.The Regency mahogany standing desk used by Churchill and Disraeli during their times as prime minister has been allocated to the National Trust’s Hughenden Manor, Disraeli’s former country house

about 18 hours ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on ICE shooting of Renee Good: ‘They’re investigating the victims instead of the perpetrator’

Late-night hosts responded to the Trump administration’s escalation of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) action in Minneapolis and its criminal investigation into the Fed chair, Jerome Powell.Jimmy Kimmel opened Tuesday’s monologue with a summary of “another bananas speech” by Donald Trump – this time at the Detroit Economic Club, where he tried to convince attenders that the protests in Minneapolis over the ICE shooting of Renee Good were “fake”.“They’re not riots, they’re real,” Kimmel responded. “First they want us to believe that we did not see what we all saw happen to Renee Good. Now he wants us to believe that the protests aren’t real

1 day ago
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‘A very tough moment’: how Trump has put museums in jeopardy

From Times Square to the Washington Monument, America saw in the new year with a bigger bang than usual, celebrating the fact that 2026 marks the nation’s 250th birthday. Yet as the US looks back, precious repositories of the nation’s history are facing an uncertain future.Museum attendances are down. Budgets are precarious. Cuts in federal funding are taking their toll

2 days ago
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Jon Stewart on the Minneapolis ICE shooting: ‘We are in a confusing, dark place’

Late-night hosts recapped a weekend of nationwide protests over the killing of Renee Nicole Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer as Donald Trump made a social media post referring to himself as the “acting president” of Venezuela.Jon Stewart wasted no time expressing outrage from the Daily Show desk on Monday evening, after a particularly dark week for US news. “What the fuck is happening?” he exclaimed. “What the fuck is happening in this country? From Minnesota, to Venezuela, to Iran, to Greenland, Cuba, Mexico, Colombia.“We are on the Donald Trump Gravitron,” he concluded

2 days ago
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Adelaide writers’ week 2026 cancelled as board apologises to Randa Abdel-Fattah for ‘how decision was represented’

Adelaide writers’ week 2026 has been cancelled after days of turmoil as more than 180 authors and speakers dropped out in protest of the decision to disinvite the Palestinian Australian author Randa Abdel-Fattah.In a statement on Tuesday afternoon, the Adelaide festival board announced the event, which was scheduled to begin on 28 February, would no longer go ahead. The three remaining members of the festival board have resigned immediately, after the resignations of four others – with the exception of the Adelaide city council representative, whose term expires in February.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailThe decision to cancel AWW entirely came five days after the festival board announced it had intervened to drop Abdel-Fattah from appearing at the festival, citing “cultural sensitivities” after the attack on the Jewish community in Bondi.On Tuesday, the board apologised to Abdel-Fattah “for how the decision was represented”

2 days ago
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Growth figures give boost to Reeves – but it’s too early to get carried away

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Grok scandal highlights how AI industry is ‘too unconstrained’, tech pioneer says

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