Anonymous wrote:Psychology majors don’t make a lot and often require a masters, but there will always be demand for in-person therapy. Also Nursing is in high demand, but there’s lots of burnout.
Will there?
It just isn’t the same, I hear over and over, from psychotherapists shrugging away concern over artificial intelligence. An AI therapist can’t really empathize. It can’t truly understand. It can’t build a therapeutic relationship with depth and connectedness the way a human therapist can.
As a therapist myself, I agree with all of these statements. An AI therapist is not equivalent to a human therapist. Like many therapists, I tend to focus on the ways that AI falls short.
But for clients, in many ways, an AI therapist is better than a human one.
https://www.psychotherapynotes.com/ai-therapist-cant-really-do-therapy/