With NHS mental health waitlists at record highs, are chatbots a possible solution?
taking Betteridge’s Law one step further - not only is the answer “no”, the fucking article itself explains why the answer is no:
People around the world have shared their private thoughts and experiences with AI chatbots, even though they are widely acknowledged as inferior to seeking professional advice.
as with so many other things, “maybe AI can fix it?” is being used as a catch-all for every systemic problem in society:
In April 2024 alone, nearly 426,000 mental health referrals were made in England - a rise of 40% in five years. An estimated one million people are also waiting to access mental health services, and private therapy can be prohibitively expensive.
fucking fund the National Health Service properly, in order to take care of the people who need it.
but instead, they want to continue cutting its budget, and use “oh there’s an AI chatbot that you can use that is totally just as good as talking to a human, trust us” as a way of sweeping the real-world harm caused by those budget cuts under the rug.
Nicholas has autism, anxiety, OCD, and says he has always experienced depression. He found face-to-face support dried up once he reached adulthood: “When you turn 18, it’s as if support pretty much stops, so I haven’t seen an actual human therapist in years.”
He tried to take his own life last autumn, and since then he says he has been on a NHS waitlist.
taking Betteridge’s Law one step further - not only is the answer “no”, the fucking article itself explains why the answer is no:
as with so many other things, “maybe AI can fix it?” is being used as a catch-all for every systemic problem in society:
fucking fund the National Health Service properly, in order to take care of the people who need it.
but instead, they want to continue cutting its budget, and use “oh there’s an AI chatbot that you can use that is totally just as good as talking to a human, trust us” as a way of sweeping the real-world harm caused by those budget cuts under the rug.