News-Medical.Net October 17, 2024
University of Michigan

While the vast majority of people over 50 look for health information on the internet, a new poll shows 74% would have very little or no trust in such information if it were generated by artificial intelligence.

Meanwhile, 20% of older adults have little or no confidence that they could spot misinformation about a health topic if they came across it.

That percentage was even higher among older adults who say their mental health, physical health or memory is fair or poor, and among those who report having a disability that limits their activities. In other words, those who might need trustworthy health information the most were more likely to say they had little or no confidence they could...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: AI (Artificial Intelligence), Patient / Consumer, Provider, Survey / Study, Technology, Trends
Seniors deserve timely access to care, not bureaucratic hurdles | Viewpoint
From Noise To Clarity, Here’s An Empowering Way To Hearing Health
More than half of US adults could benefit from GLP-1 medications, researchers find
Data show 24.3% of U.S. adults had chronic pain in past three months in 2023
GLP-1 drug coverage for obesity making inroads with large employers: Mercer

Share This Article