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MemberMay 22, 2025 at 7:44 am EDT in reply to: Would you trust an AI to be your doctor?If it is iterative, yes. I have been using ChatGPT to help with health problems I have had for 50 years. I have probably seen 20 doctors looking for help, and they try, but all have failed.
With ChatGPT, I can provide SNPs, symptoms, supplements that help and don’t help, things I have tried that helped some or not at all, and in a matter of seconds get actionable information.
Then I keep asking questions and providing more information. When I have exhausted everything I can think of, I get all the information in an action plan and stored in a PDF.
I would love to be able to run the information by a medical doctor, but there are very few with the necessary knowledge.
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MemberMay 16, 2025 at 6:10 pm EDT in reply to: IMA’s “Smart Moms” Campaign Scores VictoryIt escapes me why they stopped there. Why wasn’t the mRNA Covid vaccine rejected? There are alternate treatments and preventatives, so there is no reason to extend the emergency approval.
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MemberApril 25, 2025 at 10:14 am EDT in reply to: Persistent Cardiac InfectionI recently used ChatGPT to help me do medical research on a problem I have. There was no major new information brought out, but ChatGPT was able to confirm my hypothesis by providing references to back up each point. It also fleshed out m points with additional information.
This is after every doctor I tried to discuss this with gave me the “doctor look”, meaning they thought I spent too much time on the Internet.
Once you get your problem documented the way you want it, ChatGPT can turn it into a document you can present to a doctor, complete with references. And you could also send it to university medical researchers, and maybe a few would take the time to read it.
Just a question to get you thinking, “Could the infection be originating somewhere else in the body – mouth, leaky gut, etc.?”
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MemberJuly 28, 2024 at 6:27 pm EDT in reply to: Buying Ivermectin in TennesseeWith or without a prescription?
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MemberMay 22, 2025 at 4:14 pm EDT in reply to: Would you trust an AI to be your doctor?Even current AI goes way beyond basic tasks. What you may be seeing is the way the data has been prioritized. It tends to use WHO, government sources, certain hospitals and journals, big tech sites, as its primary sources. In other words, those sources who practiced censorship during Covid, are still the trusted sources some AIs use first. Keep drilling down and you can get beyond that.
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MemberApril 25, 2025 at 7:32 pm EDT in reply to: Persistent Cardiac InfectionI have found the best way to use ChatGPT, is to treat it like a conversation with a really smart person. You ask something and it responds. Then you can ask it a related question without having to repeat what you already said. Then you ask new questions as you have them, refine the information, go deeper, etc. ChatGPT will also come back with things it could add, like creating a diagram, or providing more information about a reference, etc. You just keep asking questions and refining the discussion.
If you don’t know how to do something in ChatGPT, just ask and it will tell you how to do it. Make sure you save the information periodically. I assumed everything was being saved, and yesterday I lost about an hour’s work. ChatGPT said it was a memory problem.
ChatGPT is also known to misunderstand or even tell some whoppers, so if you disagree, point it out and ask for clarification. Verify the important stuff.