Is AI Smart for Your Therapy Practice? The ethics of artificial intelligence in therapy

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Is AI Smart for Your Therapy Practice? The ethics of artificial intelligence in therapy
Curt and Katie chat about the use of ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence as part of your therapy practice. We look at what uses therapists are considering, the differences between chatbots and search engines, and basic information on how chatbots work. We explore ethical implications for using chatbots within different aspects of a therapist practice. This is a law and ethics continuing education podcourse.
Transcripts for this episode will be available at mtsgpodcast.com!
In this podcast episode we talk about therapists using ChatGPT in their practices
How are ChatGPT and other chatbots being used by modern therapists?

Writing blog posts and other marketing content

Getting suggestions for writing progress notes

Potentially case consultation and differential diagnosis?

What is the difference between ChatGPT (or other AI chatbots) and Search Engines?

The goals are different – developing human-sounding language versus information retrieval

Primary sources and raw data versus interpretation and an answer that sounds good

What are the legal and ethical uses of ChatGPT?

The user agreement allows all uses of the content developed based on your prompts

There is not a guarantee of unique output between different users which calls into question ownership on content and plagiarism

Citing authorship, publication credits, and whose ideas are being included in your content

Suggestions from ethical bodies on how to cite chatbots

The importance of transparency and accountability

 What is the harm in using ChatGPT without transparency on a therapist website?

The impact on pretreatment role expectations and the digital therapeutic alliance

A lack of transparency and potential for misleading prospective clients on your personality and/or expertise

If you don’t check accuracy, especially when you have someone else creating your content, you may actually create outdated information that is heavily influenced by the medical model and potentially biased

What are thoughts about using ChatGPT in clinical work for therapists?
Please use caution when using AI in any clinical work
What are recommendations for modern therapists who would like to use ChatGPT?

Use with caution: check primary sources and completely review

Transparently cite that AI was used, which app was used, how it was used, and the date when information was pulled

Be aware of SEO impacts, lack of branding, whether it adds value, and that the content is accurate and is helpful rather than harmful

Do not input any confidential information

Do not overly rely on the clinical suggestions due to bias and accuracy concerns

Receive Continuing Education for this Episode of the Modern Therapist’s Survival Guide
You can find this full course (including handouts and resources) here: https://moderntherapistcommunity.com/podcourse/
Continuing Education Approvals: Continuing Education Information


Resources for Modern Therapists mentioned in this Podcast Episode:
We’ve pulled together resources mentioned in this episode and put together some handy-dandy links. Please note that some of the links below may be affiliate links, so if you purchase after clicking below, we may get a little bit of cash in our pockets. We thank you in advance!
ChatGPT
*The full reference list can be found in the course on our learning platform.

Modern Therapist’s Survival Guide Creative Credits:
Voice Over by DW McCann https://www.facebook.com/McCannDW/
Music by Crystal Grooms Mangano https://groomsymusic.com/

Is AI Smart for Your Therapy Practice? The ethics of artificial intelligence in therapy

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Is AI Smart for Your Therapy Practice? The ethics of artificial intelligence in therapy
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