logo
Man, 60, poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT

Man, 60, poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT

Daily Mail​4 days ago
A man was left fighting for his sanity after replacing table salt with a chemical more commonly used to clean swimming pools after following AI advice.
The 60-year-old American spent three weeks in hospital suffering from hallucinations, paranoia and severe anxiety after taking dietary tips from ChatGPT.
Doctors revealed in a US medical journal that the man had developed bromism - a condition virtually wiped out since the 20th century - after he embarked on a 'personal experiment' to cut salt from his diet.
Instead of using everyday sodium chloride, the man swapped it for sodium bromide, a toxic compound once sold in sedative pills but now mostly found in pool-cleaning products.
Symptoms of bromism include psychosis, delusions, skin eruptions and nausea - and in the 19th century it was linked to up to eight per cent of psychiatric hospital admissions.
The bizarre case took a disturbing turn when the man turned up at an emergency department insisting his neighbour was trying to poison him.
He had no previous history of mental illness.
Intrigued and alarmed, doctors tested ChatGPT themselves. The bot, they said, still recommended sodium bromide as a salt alternative, with no mention of any health risk.
The case, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, warns that the rise of AI tools could contribute to 'preventable adverse health outcomes' in a chilling reminder of how machine-generated 'advice' can go horrible wrong.
AI chatbots have been caught out before. Last year, a Google bot told users they could stay healthy by 'eating rocks' – advice seemingly scraped from satirical websites.
OpenAI, the Silicon Valley giant behind ChatGPT, last week announced that its new GPT-5 update is better at answering health questions.
A spokesman told The Telegraph: 'You should not rely on output from our services as a sole source of truth or factual information, or as a substitute for professional advice.'
Daily Mail have approached OpenAI for comment.
It comes after clinical psychologist Paul Losoff told the DailyMail.com that dependency on AI robots is becoming a huge risk, and warned against getting too close to ChatGPT.
'One might come to depend and rely on AI so [much] that they don't seek out human interactions,' he said.
He explained that this could be especially detrimental for those who may already be struggling with anxiety or depression.
Dr. Losoff explained that by using AI, these people may worsen their conditions and experience cognitive symptoms like chronic pessimism, distorted thinking, or cloudy thinking. And that in itself could create further issues.
'Because of these cognitive symptoms, there is a risk that an individual turning to AI may misinterpret AI feedback leading to harm,' he said.
And when it comes to people who may be in crisis, this may only exacerbate issues.
Dr. Losoff said that there is always a risk that AI will make mistakes and provide harmful feedback during crucial mental health moments.
'There also is a profound risk for those with acute thought disorders such as schizophrenia in which they would be prone to misinterpreting AI feedback,' he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mounjaro is a taste of the battle to come over drug prices
Mounjaro is a taste of the battle to come over drug prices

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

Mounjaro is a taste of the battle to come over drug prices

I t turns out that weight-loss drugs don't shrink everything. Take the bestseller Mounjaro, produced by Eli Lilly. Its weekly injection can help patients shed the pounds, but the price is getting fatter. Last week, the US pharmaceutical giant announced that the cost of getting Mounjaro in the UK privately will rocket by up to 170 per cent. Why the super-sized price hike? It's because US President Donald Trump believes other developed countries are paying too little for their drugs, and is pressing companies to equalise prices. Unlike in free-market America, many countries impose price controls on medicines. In the UK, the cost effectiveness of new drugs is judged by Nice, an independent body, and the price is negotiated by the NHS, which is known for driving a hard bargain. There are similar arrangements in other countries.

WWE legend's daughter left with life-changing injuries after rollercoaster ride
WWE legend's daughter left with life-changing injuries after rollercoaster ride

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

WWE legend's daughter left with life-changing injuries after rollercoaster ride

The daughter of WWE icon Mick Foley has revealed that she suffered a rare neck injury more than five years ago that has left her with headaches ever since. Speaking on the 'Rulebreakers' podcast, Foley explained how her neck was injured after the ride 'went up, down, and immediately went back up.' The daughter of the retired wrestler said that it had been a 'huge mystery' why she was experiencing a headache for so long — until she was finally diagnosed with a rare neck issue. 'It took me about two months to realize I had a concussion. I'm like, "This headache is not going away, and I'm so sensitive to lights and sounds and I feel all weird,"' she said. 'And I was asking my dad, who you would think would know a lot about concussions, but he was like, "Sorry, I don't really know."' 'I feel like his concussions, boom, they happen, and he's like OK. But he never really had a concussion that lasted longer than maybe a couple months. I've been to around 50 doctors, between doctors and physical therapists. It's just been a mystery.'

‘Fat jabs left me so depressed it was like having The Deer Hunter theme on repeat in my head'
‘Fat jabs left me so depressed it was like having The Deer Hunter theme on repeat in my head'

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

‘Fat jabs left me so depressed it was like having The Deer Hunter theme on repeat in my head'

I can say without any doubt that I've never been depressed. So when I began using weight-loss injections three months ago it was a huge shock to find that rather than my usual unhappy-go-lucky self, I sensed something new. Something really bad. I was depressed and I could only assume it was a side effect of the drugs. Within a week of my first injection I felt a deep despair, seemingly from nowhere. Nothing had happened in my work or social life to trigger it. For a few days I searched for a cause, confused and concerned about where this blackness had come from. Suddenly, to an almost absurd, comical extent, existence seemed bleak and irredeemable. It was like having the theme tune to 1978's war drama The Deer Hunter playing in my head on repeat. After the initial shock, I had to somehow find a way to recognise this state for what it was: artificially induced – the mental equivalent of fake news. I have known lots of people with 'real' depression: the kind that keeps a person in bed for a week as if there were a weight tied to their body. The kind that waxes and wanes without reason, making it hard for those around them to empathise. I'd never known that feeling, yet here it was squatting on top of me day after day. Using weight-loss injections produced no other side effects. I have been sleeping well, I've not felt any nausea and I have undoubtedly lost weight, which was the whole point of this expensive experiment in the first place. Much of what has been written about the mental health impact of these treatments has been on either the positive effects of losing weight – improved self esteem – and how some who experience ADHD report a heightened sense of focus and concentration. Nowhere in the literature of the companies that make the treatments, or those who sell it, is there any suggestion that depression is a verifiable risk. Side effects are listed as nausea and vomiting, constipation, diarrhaea, reflux, headaches and fatigue. So much the same as a long stag weekend, rather than a continuous vigil at the edge of the abyss. The medications in question are known as 'glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists' (examples are semaglutide in Ozempic and Wegovy, and tirzepatide in Mounjaro). They were conceived as a treatment for diabetes and were later found to have beneficial effects fighting obesity. They may also help with cardiovascular disease and even neurological disorders such as Alzheimer's. They work by mimicking the effects of the hormone GLP-1, which helps regulate blood sugar levels and appetite. Dr Riccardo De Giorgi, Clinical Lecturer in General Adult Psychiatry at the University of Oxford is currently studying the effects of these drugs and admits that it is too soon to know if there is a possible link with depression, but suggests evidence points to a positive, rather negative, impact on mental health. 'The most recent studies available suggest that GLP-1 medications do not increase depressive symptoms or suicidality,' he says. 'These are based on drug trials where the patients were measured for depression 'scores' and psychological wellbeing, and they didn't show a negative effect overall. 'What happens if you are exposed to these drugs and you have a history of depressive episodes? In that regard, we don't have any evidence at all. There are now some more trials pending on depression, but it's very early days.' I asked around amongst friends and friends of friends (there are so many people using these treatments now that they aren't hard to find), and several reported very similar experiences to my own. One mentioned feeling 'oversensitive and on the verge of tears all the time'. Another said she felt so depressed and exhausted through emotional stress that she had to stop using it. She wanted to start using jabs again but was afraid of reliving her depression. A third said the worst days were 'shocking' but eventually she began to feel better – whether that was because the effects wore off or because she became more adept at coping she couldn't be sure. For me, the strangest feature of this self-inflicted ordeal was that I couldn't trust my emotions. It was like I was in my own matrix, where what I was experiencing felt real but was actually a simulation I had brought on myself – all while paying a monthly fee for the privilege. When something bothered me at work, there was no way to measure its real importance, which meant there was no reliable way to respond to it. How could I tell if a crisis at home was trivial, a total catastrophe or something in between? Thinking about the terrible state of Britain and the world suddenly felt deeply personal rather than an essential part of my job. Just hearing the first bars of a John Barry film score or recalling a random memory of my daughters set me off like Adele at an awards ceremony. I wondered if my new mood was connected to missing food, since I had become a one-meal a day person with no snacking. Maybe giving up eating for pleasure was getting me down? But while I love food like Keir Starmer loves free glasses, not even giving up crisps could make me feel this hopeless. The accepted routes for treating 'real' depression do not really apply to me since all I needed to do was stop the injections. I could hardly start taking anti-depressants to cope with the artificially induced depression brought on by other drugs. Therapy to treat it also seemed ridiculous, since it would be treating something that I had the power to stop. That was not a luxury afforded to those unlucky enough to experience the real thing. The therapists I asked about this were none the wiser, expressing confusion about how they might treat a patient who believed their depression had been triggered not by a pre-existing condition or circumstance, but by weight-loss injections. For me, feeling this way was my choice: a trade off for a thinner waist and a current drop of 1st 9lbs. Dr De Giorgi offered one explanation, yet admits that until he and others are able to conclude further research there is still no clinical evidence of a link between the drugs and depression. 'Some forms of depression are associated with high levels of inflammatory molecules, in which case the anti-inflammatory effects of GLP-1 medications would be helpful,' he explains. 'For other people, who are less prone to inflammation, the drugs might upset the balance in the body that is already in a sweet spot, so the drugs mean you have 'too little inflammation'. A degree of healthy inflammation is needed for the normal upkeep of brain cells. GLP-1 medications seem to be able to enter the brain, so we shouldn't be surprised if we find there are other implications such as mental effects.' Even if a link was ever proven, which is not likely as things stand, it's hardly going to provide much comfort. Most recently, the icing on this doom-laden cake – the kind a goth would get for his birthday at a Dracula festival in Whitby – was that I began to have nightmares. A mixture of Franz Kafka's brand of horror and Stephen King's It, they were like video nasties in which the lead character shouts: 'This isn't real!' and tries to wake themselves up. After a couple of these, I had to set a deadline to get myself off this stuff. No chiselled jawline is worth this. Kate Moss once famously said: 'Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels', but, for me, it was a case of nothing feels as bad as skinny tastes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store