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AI and therapy

AI and therapy

Last month, Utah became the first state to introduce a law to regulate mental health chatbots, arguing these bots cannot present themselves as regulated health professionals or therapists. At the same time, clinicians are researching ways to integrate AI into mental healthcare to make it more accessible. So what do patients need to understand about talking to a chatbot vs. a therapist? How can privacy be protected, and is there an ethical way to integrate AI into therapy? To answer your questions, Just Asking talked to two guests. Dr. Betsy Stade is a clinical psychologist and research scientist at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI. Dr. Janine Hubbard is a child psychologist.

Just Asking · CBC

June 7, 202558m 12s

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Show Notes

Last month, Utah became the first state to introduce a law to regulate mental health chatbots, arguing these bots cannot present themselves as regulated health professionals or therapists. At the same time, clinicians are researching ways to integrate AI into mental healthcare to make it more accessible. So what do patients need to understand about talking to a chatbot vs. a therapist? How can privacy be protected, and is there an ethical way to integrate AI into therapy? To answer your questions, Just Asking talked to two guests. Dr. Betsy Stade is a clinical psychologist and research scientist at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI. Dr. Janine Hubbard is a child psychologist.