Close Menu
  • News
  • Health
  • Lifetsyle
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • World
  • contact
What's Hot

Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk

December 13, 2025

Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university

December 13, 2025

Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia

December 13, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk
  • Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university
  • Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia
  • Ex-Prince Andrew appears in photo released by Jeffrey Epstein’s estate, shared by House Democrats
  • Former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh reacts to Sherrone Moore's firing and charges
  • Trump honors Miracle on Ice team; Mike Eruzione, Jim Craig praise president in return
  • Florida influencer, 41, accused of inappropriately touching, exposing herself to teenage son's friend
  • Melissa Joan Hart was nearly fired from ‘Sabrina’ over racy Maxim photoshoot
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
NEW YORK TIMES POST
Demo
  • News
  • Health
  • Lifetsyle
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • World
  • contact
NEW YORK TIMES POST
Home»Health»ChatGPT dietary advice sends man to hospital with dangerous chemical poisoning
Health

ChatGPT dietary advice sends man to hospital with dangerous chemical poisoning

nytimespostBy nytimespostAugust 13, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A man who used ChatGPT for dietary advice ended up poisoning himself — and wound up in the hospital.

The 60-year-old man, who was looking to eliminate table salt from his diet for health reasons, used the large language model (LLM) to get suggestions for what to replace it with, according to a case study published this week in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

When ChatGPT suggested swapping sodium chloride (table salt) for sodium bromide, the man made the replacement for a three-month period — although, the journal article noted, the recommendation was likely referring to it for other purposes, such as cleaning.

CHATGPT COULD BE SILENTLY REWIRING YOUR BRAIN AS EXPERTS URGE CAUTION FOR LONG-TERM USE

Sodium bromide is a chemical compound that resembles salt, but is toxic for human consumption. 

It was once used as an anticonvulsant and sedative, but today is primarily used for cleaning, manufacturing and agricultural purposes, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Scammers can exploit your data from just 1 ChatGPT search

A man who used ChatGPT for dietary advice ended up poisoning himself — and wound up in the hospital. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

When the man arrived at the hospital, he reported experiencing fatigue, insomnia, poor coordination, facial acne, cherry angiomas (red bumps on the skin) and excessive thirst — all symptoms of bromism, a condition caused by long-term exposure to sodium bromide.

The man also showed signs of paranoia, the case study noted, as he claimed that his neighbor was trying to poison him.

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE DETECTS CANCER WITH 25% GREATER ACCURACY THAN DOCTORS IN UCLA STUDY

He was also found to have auditory and visual hallucinations, and was ultimately placed on a psychiatric hold after attempting to escape. 

The man was treated with intravenous fluids and electrolytes, and was also put on anti-psychotic medication. He was released from the hospital after three weeks of monitoring.

“This case also highlights how the use of artificial intelligence (AI) can potentially contribute to the development of preventable adverse health outcomes,” the researchers wrote in the case study.

“These are language prediction tools — they lack common sense and will give rise to terrible results if the human user does not apply their own common sense.”

“Unfortunately, we do not have access to his ChatGPT conversation log and we will never be able to know with certainty what exactly the output he received was, since individual responses are unique and build from previous inputs.”

It is “highly unlikely” that a human doctor would have mentioned sodium bromide when speaking with a patient seeking a substitute for sodium chloride, they noted.

NEW AI TOOL ANALYZES FACE PHOTOS TO PREDICT HEALTH OUTCOMES

“It is important to consider that ChatGPT and other AI systems can generate scientific inaccuracies, lack the ability to critically discuss results and ultimately fuel the spread of misinformation,” the researchers concluded.

Dr. Jacob Glanville, CEO of Centivax, a San Francisco biotechnology company, emphasized that people should not use ChatGPT as a substitute for a doctor.

Man pouring salt into pot

When ChatGPT suggested swapping sodium chloride (table salt) for sodium bromide, the man, not pictured, made the replacement for a three-month period. (iStock)

“These are language prediction tools — they lack common sense and will give rise to terrible results if the human user does not apply their own common sense when deciding what to ask these systems and whether to heed their recommendations,” Glanville, who was not involved in the case study, told Fox News Digital. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“This is a classic example of the problem: The system essentially went, ‘You want a salt alternative? Sodium bromide is often listed as a replacement for sodium chloride in chemistry reactions, so therefore it’s the highest-scoring replacement here.’”

Dr. Harvey Castro, a board-certified emergency medicine physician and national speaker on artificial intelligence based in Dallas, confirmed that AI is a tool and not a doctor. 

Man spooning salt

It is “highly unlikely” that a human doctor would have mentioned sodium bromide when speaking with a patient seeking a substitute for sodium chloride, the researchers said. (iStock)

“Large language models generate text by predicting the most statistically likely sequence of words, not by fact-checking,” he told Fox News Digital.

“ChatGPT’s bromide blunder shows why context is king in health advice,” Castro went on. “AI is not a replacement for professional medical judgment, aligning with OpenAI’s disclaimers.”

Castro also cautioned that there is a “regulation gap” when it comes to using LLMs to get medical information.

“Our terms say that ChatGPT is not intended for use in the treatment of any health condition, and is not a substitute for professional advice.”

“FDA bans on bromide don’t extend to AI advice — global health AI oversight remains undefined,” he said.

There is also the risk that LLMs could have data bias and a lack of verification, leading to hallucinated information.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

“If training data includes outdated, rare or chemically focused references, the model may surface them in inappropriate contexts, such as bromide as a salt substitute,” Castro noted.

“Also, current LLMs don’t have built-in cross-checking against up-to-date medical databases unless explicitly integrated.”

OpenAI ChatGPT app on the App Store website

One expert cautioned that there is a “regulation gap” when it comes to using large language models to get medical information. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

To prevent cases like this one, Castro called for more safeguards for LLMs, such as integrated medical knowledge bases, automated risk flags, contextual prompting and a combination of human and AI oversight.

The expert added, “With targeted safeguards, LLMs can evolve from risky generalists into safer, specialized tools; however, without regulation and oversight, rare cases like this will likely recur.”

For more health articles, visit www.foxnews.com/health

OpenAI, the San Francisco-based maker of ChatGPT, provided the following statement to Fox News Digital.

“Our terms say that ChatGPT is not intended for use in the treatment of any health condition, and is not a substitute for professional advice. We have safety teams working on reducing risks and have trained our AI systems to encourage people to seek professional guidance.”

Melissa Rudy is senior health editor and a member of the lifestyle team at Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to melissa.rudy@fox.com.

advice artificial intelligence ChatGPT chemical dangerous dietary health hospital lifestyle man medical tech nutrition poisoning sends
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related Posts

Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk

December 13, 2025

Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia

December 13, 2025

Mystery donor drops gold coin worth thousands in Salvation Army donation bucket: 'We are sincerely grateful'

December 12, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

The Latest News
  • Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk December 13, 2025
  • Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university December 13, 2025
  • Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia December 13, 2025
  • Ex-Prince Andrew appears in photo released by Jeffrey Epstein’s estate, shared by House Democrats December 13, 2025
  • Former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh reacts to Sherrone Moore's firing and charges December 13, 2025
  • Trump honors Miracle on Ice team; Mike Eruzione, Jim Craig praise president in return December 13, 2025
Economy News
News

Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk

By nytimespostDecember 13, 2025

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A Georgia woman is recovering from devastating…

Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university

December 13, 2025

Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia

December 13, 2025
Top Trending
News

Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk

By nytimespostDecember 13, 2025

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A Georgia woman is…

Sports

Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university

By nytimespostDecember 13, 2025

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! The University of Michigan…

News

Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia

By nytimespostDecember 13, 2025

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! An obese man on…

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Advertisement
Demo
Demo
Top Posts

Massachusetts police officer shot by colleague during service of restraining order

July 1, 2025

Former Houston appointee claims flood-ravaged Camp Mystic is 'Whites-only' in viral video

July 6, 2025

Deadly social media trend threatens kids, homeowners defending themselves: 'children are going to get killed’

July 5, 2025

Trans athlete wins USA Cycling women's event as female opponents protest and speak out

July 2, 2025
Don't Miss
News

Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk

By nytimespostDecember 13, 2025

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A Georgia woman is recovering from devastating…

Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university

December 13, 2025

Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia

December 13, 2025

Ex-Prince Andrew appears in photo released by Jeffrey Epstein’s estate, shared by House Democrats

December 13, 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Demo

NEW YORK TIMES POST

 

Categories
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Nature
NEW YORK TIMES POST
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

About Us
About Us

Your source for the lifestyle news. This demo is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a lifestyle site. Visit our main page for more demos.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: info@example.com
Contact: +1-320-0123-451

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Georgia woman hospitalized after attacker hurls corrosive chemical during evening walk

December 13, 2025

Michigan football staffer who had alleged affair with Sherrone Moore still employed by university

December 13, 2025

Obese man on death row chooses buffet of BBQ, wings, cheeseburger, pizza, ice cream for last meal in Georgia

December 13, 2025
Most Popular

Massachusetts police officer shot by colleague during service of restraining order

July 1, 2025

Former Houston appointee claims flood-ravaged Camp Mystic is 'Whites-only' in viral video

July 6, 2025

Deadly social media trend threatens kids, homeowners defending themselves: 'children are going to get killed’

July 5, 2025
© 2025 NEW YORK TIMES POST. Designed by EREN.
  • News
  • Health
  • Lifetsyle
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • World
  • contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.