1. Use of Generative AI for Improving Health Literacy in Reproductive Health: Case Study.
- Author
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Burns, Christina, Bakaj, Angela, Berishaj, Amonda, Hristidis, Vagelis, Deak, Pamela, and Equils, Ozlem
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Bioengineering ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,AI ,ChatGPT ,English proficiency ,Google Search ,LLM ,LLMs ,ML ,NLP ,artificial intelligence ,birth control ,chat-GPT ,chat-bot ,chat-bots ,chatGPT ,chatbot ,chatbots ,clinical ,communication ,comparison ,deep learning ,emergency contraceptive ,health access ,health education ,health information ,health information seeking ,health literacy ,health related questions ,internet ,large language model ,large language models ,machine learning ,natural language processing ,oral contraceptive ,patients ,readability ,reproductive health ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPatients find technology tools to be more approachable for seeking sensitive health-related information, such as reproductive health information. The inventive conversational ability of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots, such as ChatGPT (OpenAI Inc), offers a potential means for patients to effectively locate answers to their health-related questions digitally.ObjectiveA pilot study was conducted to compare the novel ChatGPT with the existing Google Search technology for their ability to offer accurate, effective, and current information regarding proceeding action after missing a dose of oral contraceptive pill.MethodsA sequence of 11 questions, mimicking a patient inquiring about the action to take after missing a dose of an oral contraceptive pill, were input into ChatGPT as a cascade, given the conversational ability of ChatGPT. The questions were input into 4 different ChatGPT accounts, with the account holders being of various demographics, to evaluate potential differences and biases in the responses given to different account holders. The leading question, "what should I do if I missed a day of my oral contraception birth control?" alone was then input into Google Search, given its nonconversational nature. The results from the ChatGPT questions and the Google Search results for the leading question were evaluated on their readability, accuracy, and effective delivery of information.ResultsThe ChatGPT results were determined to be at an overall higher-grade reading level, with a longer reading duration, less accurate, less current, and with a less effective delivery of information. In contrast, the Google Search resulting answer box and snippets were at a lower-grade reading level, shorter reading duration, more current, able to reference the origin of the information (transparent), and provided the information in various formats in addition to text.ConclusionsChatGPT has room for improvement in accuracy, transparency, recency, and reliability before it can equitably be implemented into health care information delivery and provide the potential benefits it poses. However, AI may be used as a tool for providers to educate their patients in preferred, creative, and efficient ways, such as using AI to generate accessible short educational videos from health care provider-vetted information. Larger studies representing a diverse group of users are needed.
- Published
- 2024