I asked Chatgpt to DX my kid

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My husband felt a sting in his chest but chatgpt told me for free that it was heartburn from his gross lunch.
Anyway, funeral is in Tuesday.


I am having some enzyme issues. Chatgpt has given me a lot of background information so I can ask more doctor more questions about what's going on. It's a quick way to get a lot of facts. I go to other sources to verify but it paints a quick picture.

There was a news story a couple years ago about how AI was answering questions more effectively than doctors, because all the medical books have been dumped into the system.

AI is simply a tool. How you use it successfully is up to you.




Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My husband felt a sting in his chest but chatgpt told me for free that it was heartburn from his gross lunch.
Anyway, funeral is in Tuesday.


I am having some enzyme issues. Chatgpt has given me a lot of background information so I can ask more doctor more questions about what's going on. It's a quick way to get a lot of facts. I go to other sources to verify but it paints a quick picture.

There was a news story a couple years ago about how AI was answering questions more effectively than doctors, because all the medical books have been dumped into the system.

AI is simply a tool. How you use it successfully is up to you.






Meh. I just asked ChatGPT a question based on my medications and it was like pulling teeth to get it to cite sources, and then I had to Google to confirm it had not hallucinated them. I get better research results just googling myself.
Anonymous
But educational category of autism is separate from a medical dx of autism. Your dc may not qualify for IEP under language disability but may qualify under autism. Also, the educational category does not dictate services. Seems like you believe you have a smoking gun against the school district but it’s not clear that you do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My husband felt a sting in his chest but chatgpt told me for free that it was heartburn from his gross lunch.
Anyway, funeral is in Tuesday.


I am having some enzyme issues. Chatgpt has given me a lot of background information so I can ask more doctor more questions about what's going on. It's a quick way to get a lot of facts. I go to other sources to verify but it paints a quick picture.

There was a news story a couple years ago about how AI was answering questions more effectively than doctors, because all the medical books have been dumped into the system.

AI is simply a tool. How you use it successfully is up to you.






Meh. I just asked ChatGPT a question based on my medications and it was like pulling teeth to get it to cite sources, and then I had to Google to confirm it had not hallucinated them. I get better research results just googling myself.


And Google has a built in AI anyway.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:But educational category of autism is separate from a medical dx of autism. Your dc may not qualify for IEP under language disability but may qualify under autism. Also, the educational category does not dictate services. Seems like you believe you have a smoking gun against the school district but it’s not clear that you do.


A "smoking gun" that the kid might be getting helpful supports he might not be legally entitled to! Great detective work, OP!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My husband felt a sting in his chest but chatgpt told me for free that it was heartburn from his gross lunch.
Anyway, funeral is in Tuesday.


I am having some enzyme issues. Chatgpt has given me a lot of background information so I can ask more doctor more questions about what's going on. It's a quick way to get a lot of facts. I go to other sources to verify but it paints a quick picture.

There was a news story a couple years ago about how AI was answering questions more effectively than doctors, because all the medical books have been dumped into the system.

AI is simply a tool. How you use it successfully is up to you.






Meh. I just asked ChatGPT a question based on my medications and it was like pulling teeth to get it to cite sources, and then I had to Google to confirm it had not hallucinated them. I get better research result's just googling myself.


This surprises me. All you have to say in the prompt is “provide citations.” You can also specify the citations come from medical journals, for example.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My husband felt a sting in his chest but chatgpt told me for free that it was heartburn from his gross lunch.
Anyway, funeral is in Tuesday.


I am having some enzyme issues. Chatgpt has given me a lot of background information so I can ask more doctor more questions about what's going on. It's a quick way to get a lot of facts. I go to other sources to verify but it paints a quick picture.

There was a news story a couple years ago about how AI was answering questions more effectively than doctors, because all the medical books have been dumped into the system.

AI is simply a tool. How you use it successfully is up to you.






Meh. I just asked ChatGPT a question based on my medications and it was like pulling teeth to get it to cite sources, and then I had to Google to confirm it had not hallucinated them. I get better research results just googling myself.


And Google has a built in AI anyway.


Google is miles behind Perplexity/Grok/ChatGPT
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My husband felt a sting in his chest but chatgpt told me for free that it was heartburn from his gross lunch.
Anyway, funeral is in Tuesday.


I am having some enzyme issues. Chatgpt has given me a lot of background information so I can ask more doctor more questions about what's going on. It's a quick way to get a lot of facts. I go to other sources to verify but it paints a quick picture.

There was a news story a couple years ago about how AI was answering questions more effectively than doctors, because all the medical books have been dumped into the system.

AI is simply a tool. How you use it successfully is up to you.






Meh. I just asked ChatGPT a question based on my medications and it was like pulling teeth to get it to cite sources, and then I had to Google to confirm it had not hallucinated them. I get better research result's just googling myself.


This surprises me. All you have to say in the prompt is “provide citations.” You can also specify the citations come from medical journals, for example.


I don’t know, whatever I was asking (which I thought was direct) it claimed it couldn’t do so until I repeated myself. But then I had to double check to make sure the articles were real and that they said what GPT claimed they said. Googling from the start would have taken less time.
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