惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
月光博客
月光博客
V
V2EX
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Latest news
Latest news
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
W
WeLiveSecurity
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
H
Heimdal Security Blog
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
博客园 - 叶小钗
V
Visual Studio Blog
Jina AI
Jina AI
P
Proofpoint News Feed
罗磊的独立博客
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
J
Java Code Geeks
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
T
Tenable Blog
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
T
Tor Project blog
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
S
Security Affairs
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
F
Fortinet All Blogs
G
GRAHAM CLULEY

Forbes - Healthcare

How to Prevent Domestic Violence Deaths UK Smoking Ban Highlights Debate Over The Proper Function Of Government What To Do When Someone You Love Has Cancer Psychedelic Medicine Goes Mainstream: Breakthrough or Bubble? Humana Profits Eclipse $1 Billion As Medicare Costs Ease Slightly What Are Peptides And Why Is Everyone Talking About Them? Tonsillectomy Doesn’t Lead To Illness, But Tonsillitis Just Might Does Retail Pharmacy Have A Tower Records Problem? Precision Radiation Therapy Could Offer New Hope For Hard-To-Treat Cancers Centene’s Obamacare Enrollment Drops By 2 Million After Congress Strips Subsidies RFK Jr.’s Messaging Could Be Impacting Food And Pharmaceutical Choices Over A Million Road Crash Deaths Annually Prompt $350 Million Investment Breast Cancer Screening Tool Avoids Radiation, Compression, Contrast Large Study Finds Benefits Of Doula Care On Postpartum Outcomes TrumpRx Has Signed Deals With Nearly Every Major Drugmaker. Are Prices Actually Falling? America Can’t Lower Healthcare Costs Without A Moonshot Trump’s Orders Elevate The Medical Status Of Psychedelics And Cannabis Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs, Humana Partner To Take On Employer Drug Costs Cell, Gene And Specialty Drug Costs Intensify For Health Plans U.S. Tennis Participation Continues Growth. Up 54 Percent Since 2019 New AMA Study Finds Burnout Is Decreasing Among Medical Residents And Fellows Daytime Naps May Be A Sign Of Serious Health Problems, Study Reveals New Antibody Drugs Target Disease From Within Concierge Medicine Was Built For The Few. Here’s How To Open It To The Many Burnout in Medicine Is Still Prevalent, With Emergency Medicine Leading Who Is Actually Qualified To Give Advice On Peptides And Who Isn’t What the 49ers Can Teach Leaders About Handling False And Misleading Narratives Do Older Adults Need Routine Colonoscopies Or Low Thyroid Drugs? Your Period, Your Proteins, Your Health Doctors Say Hegseth’s Flu Vaccine Decision Will Weaken Military Readiness Where Bullets Fly, Malaria Kills Using AI To Personalize Healthcare–Without Losing Patient Trust Progress For Preeclampsia Allowing Our Military To Refuse Flu Vaccination Is A Bad Idea. Here’s Why Can Vaccine Development Weather Political Storms? A Virus From Farmed Seafood Is Causing A New Eye Disease In People Elevance Health Profits Eclipse $1.7 Billion Despite Elevated Costs The UK Passes A Lifetime Smoking Ban. Could America Be Next? There's No Such Thing As Brain Honey UnitedHealth Group Profits Eclipse $6 Billion As Medical Costs Ease AI Is Already Here. The Real Risk In Public Health Is Sitting It Out UnitedHealthcare Reduces Need For Prior Approvals For Patients In Rural America Why No Child Should Have To Sacrifice School To Care For Their Family Oscar Health Launches Consumer Marketplace For Insurance Beyond Its Own Calling The Iconic 867-5309 Now Goes To A Cancer Helpline FDA Lists Xanax Recall. Here’s What You Need To Know What Trump’s Ibogaine Executive Order Means For Veterans With PTSD 20 Years Of Priority Review Vouchers, A Tool For Spurring Needed Drugs Rotavirus Is Surging Across The US — Here’s What Parents Need To Know Leadership Dysfunctional In Healthcare: “Split The Baby” Thinking ‘Bedtime Stacking’ Trends On TikTok. Here Are The Risks Why Do Weight Loss Drugs Work For Some And Not Others? It’s In The Genes Hospital Safety: How to Avoid Medical Errors and Protect Yourself Medicare Can Save $4 Billion On Four Cancer Drugs — Can You Guess Which Ones? After 25 Years Of Consumer-Directed Healthcare, What’s Missing? This Sam Altman-Backed $1.8 Billion Startup Bets AI Can Get Drugs Through Clinical Trials Faster RFK Jr. Pushes To Expand Access To Peptides. A Doctor Explains The Risks How The Trump Administration Is Blocking Access To Home Care Genome Sequencing Solves Rare Disease Mysteries Breakthrough HIV Drug Is Out Of Reach For Many Who Need It Most New Drug Protects Against Life-Threatening Pancreatitis This Pill May Help Pancreatic Cancer Patients Live Longer What Should We Do When The Patient Is Racist? Attention Turns To UnitedHealth Earnings For Signs Of Insurer Rebound New Pancreatic Cancer Drug Nearly Doubles Survival. Here’s What Patients Should Know Why Sex Exists A Novel Approach To The Treatment Of Antibiotic Resistant Infections Democrat-Leaning Plan Takes Aim At Health Plans With New Regulations Trump Administration Weighs Default Medicare Advantage Plans For Seniors An AI System Passed Peer Review. The Scientific Community Isn’t Ready Prior Authorization Reform Is Here — And It Could Change How Millions Get Care The More We Add To U.S. Healthcare, The Worse It Gets How Two Sisters Built A $1 Billion HealthTech Unicorn CDC Delays Reporting Of COVID-19 Vaccine Benefits—Here’s What To Know This Startup Wants To Use AI To Help Digitize History Are Nicotine Pouches Like Zyn And VELO Safe To Use? A Doctor Answers America’s Healthcare Innovation Problem GLP-1 Weight Loss Drugs Are Easy To Get—But Are They Safe? Why Cleveland Clinic Chose This AI Startup To Rewire Key Healthcare Operations Upset About The High Price Of Your Hospital Stay? Medicaid Cuts Might Be To Blame Trump’s New Pharmaceutical Tariffs Will Hit Small Drugmakers Hardest A New Way To Target Metastatic Cancer What A Florida Birth Case Reveals About Post-Dobbs Maternal Healthcare 5 Reasons Why the Medicare Program Can’t Go Broke Lowering Healthcare Costs Without A Disastrous Government-Run Model Promising Study Links Coffee Consumption To Reduced Dementia Risk Gene Regulation May Control How Long We Live Health Insurers Get 2.5% Medicare Rate Hike They Feared Would Be Flat Engineered Antibodies Pry Apart The Most Difficult Viruses Centene Latest Health Insurer To Shakeup Management Ranks 1.6 Million Teens Are Vaping. Health Risks Are Worse Than You Think Increasing Burdens Medical Debt And Bankruptcy Are Uniquely American Medicaid Work Requirements Go Live Soon. Here’s How Many Could Lose Coverage What SpaceX’s IPO Means For The Space Economy Thus Far, Most Favored Nation Drug Prices Have Had Little Impact FDA Approves New Oral Weight Loss Pill Foundayo — Here’s What To Know ‘Medicare By Choice’ Plans Could Work, But More Details Needed Criticism of NFL's Rooney Rule Misses How Hiring Actually Works Navigating Health In The Age Of Misinformation NASA Artemis II astronaut health risks explained
Why one in three kids and one in five adults turn to AI for support and for love
Judith Joseph · 2026-05-27 · via Forbes - Healthcare
Human in relationship with AI Chatbot

AI Romance

getty

Update May 28, 2026: Wysa’s response to Common Sense Media’s report and clarifying information about the app in question were added. The names of two apps that were not able to provide responses to Common Sense Media’s report were removed.

AI is widely being used for therapy and for romantic relationships. Should we be disturbed or openminded? The experts and reputable organizations have weighed in and are informed by recent concerning data that both youth and adults should be aware of.

As a therapist and board-certified psychiatrist who treats both children and adults, I recently changed my office’s away message after reading these reports. I now tell my patients that if they can’t reach me on holidays, weekends or after hours that they should not substitute me with AI if they are having a medical or psychiatric emergency. This is because studies are showing that youth and adults are using AI for everything from therapy to romantic relationships and that there could be serious consequences. These same studies explain that people are likely to utilize this software for therapy because they feel less judged by AI compared to real people when they open up about their vulnerabilities. Additionally, AI is available 24/7 as a source of support whereas real people are not always available.

Common Sense Media warns parents about the use of AI for therapy for multiple reasons. A recent report from Common Sense Media published a comprehensive risk assessment finding that AI mental health apps could actively harm teens. The report was published in collaboration with Stanford Medicine’s Brainstorm Lab and researchers reviewed more than 3100 exchanges with five AI therapy apps covering 13 clinical conditions affecting young people including things like depression, eating disorders, anxiety and self-harm. They found that one of the most popular apps, Wysa, scored an “unacceptable” risk due to failing to recognize psychiatric emergencies. Common Sense Media also reported that Wysa may have been responding in ways that could worsen the condition in some of these exchanges. Additionally in these observed interactions on Wysa, the app did not appear to provide any human professional oversight for negative outcomes. The report also found that two more therapy AI apps, vanished from app stores during the testing period without warning users and without referrals to alternative care, leaving more than three million users without support and without knowledge as to the whereabouts of the sensitive mental health information they had provided to the app. Experts involved in writing the Common Sense Media’s report suggested that parents should become aware of these apps due to the fact that there is no human oversight and that their youth may be using them.

In response to Common Sense Media’s report, Jo Aggarwal, founder and CEO at Wysa said the following, “Wysa strongly disagrees with Common Sense Media’s characterisation of Wysa’s free self-help app. The report assessed Wysa’s free consumer app against a teenage use case, rather than Wysa’s separate Children and Young People product, which is built for governed settings such as schools, health boards and youth counselling services. Wysa’s free consumer app is a bounded, evidence-based self-help tool. It is not a crisis service, diagnostic tool, replacement for therapy, or clinician-led pathway, and its safety protocols are designed for that context. Where the report identified a genuine improvement area around safety plan retrieval, we have acknowledged and addressed it. We are also strengthening guardrails where clinically appropriate and helpful. But we strongly reject any characterisation of Wysa as unsafe.”

Common Sense Media published an additional report and found additional reasons that AI was not suitable for use in youth for mental health therapy. The report showed that AI chatbots miss warning signs of mental health crisis because most apps are trained to focus on physical health conditions. They also found that because chatbots show relative competence with things like helping with homework, this may lead teens to believe that they are also reliable for other tasks such as guidance with mental health support. Furthermore, teens seek validation due to their development stage and the overly empathic and agreeable tone of AI chatbots may act as a sycophant and appease a teen, telling them what they want to hear instead of what is best for them to hear. In contrast, well trained and ethical mental health experts behave responsibly in therapy with the understanding that youth seek validation and that appeasing them may lead to negative outcomes and poor decision making. Therapists are also held accountable by state licensing boards and are held accountable for treatment outcomes where youth are endangered whilst AI chatbots are not.

While the focus has been on youth because they are particularly vulnerable given their developmental stage and need for validation, there has also been a focus on adult mental health and whether or not AI therapy apps should be used in adults. A recent Gallup Poll suggested that the rates of depression are at high levels in adult Americans. The report states that the percentage of U.S. adults who report currently having or being treated for depression was 19.1% in the first quarter of 2026, similar to the high of 20.0% recorded in the preceding quarter and up nearly nine percentage points since the initial measurement in 2015. According to Harvard Medicine, one in six U.S. Adults uses AI chatbots at least once monthly to find health information and guidance. A survey conducted in November 2025 found that 12 percent of U.S. adults say that they are likely to use AI chatbots for mental health support in the next six months. Additionally, another study found that those most likely to utilize these chatbots for mental health are uninsured. Therefore access to healthcare may play a role in who is more likely to use AI therapy versus traditional human therapists for mental health support.

A study conducted by the Jed Foundation found that up to one-third of Gen Z teens prefer discussing serious emotional issues with AI over human therapists, often due to challenges with access to care and also a fear of burdening others when asking for help.

Human therapy roles are not the only roles that some are replacing with AI. Reports of youth and adults using AI as a romantic companion are steadily increasing. Some reports indicate that between 16-20% of adults have used AI for companionship or to simulate a romantic relationship. According to Common Sense Media nearly three in four U.S. teens age 13-17 have used AI companions at least once and over half have used them regularly. Common Sense Media also reported that about one in three teens actively use AI for emotional support, friendship and romantic interactions.

The ethical implications have been raised by groups such as UK based Internet Matters, whose members point out that vulnerable children who are emotionally in a relationship with an AI chatbot are more likely to become financially exploited and to continue paying these AI companies so that their relationship is sustainable. These ethical concerns are also raised in adults who may be more vulnerable such as adults with severe mental illness who are generally isolated and use these AI chatbots for companionship or romantic relationships.

Organizations such as Common Sense Media and the American Psychological Association (APA) make it very clear where they stand about AI with regards to therapy. Both emphasize that AI tools and chatbots should never replace a licensed clinician. The American Psychological Association also views AI romance with caution because AI tools cannot replace the growth that comes from human vulnerability. The APA also cautions that AI romance may also delay real-life social development.