FDA to weigh AI tools for mental health

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The FDA’s Digital Health Advisory Committee will meet Nov. 7 to evaluate whether generative AI tools can be used safely and effectively in mental healthcare. The session marks the committee’s first in nearly a year and comes amid growing use of AI-powered chatbots by patients seeking alternatives to traditional therapy, according to a Nov. 3 report from Politico.

Here are five things to know:

  1. The FDA has not approved any generative AI devices for mental health treatment. However, it has authorized more than 1,200 AI-enabled tools for other clinical purposes.
  1. The committee will hear presentations on clinical trial data, provider and patient considerations, and use cases from other industries, according to an FDA meeting summary reviewed by Politico
  1. Regulators said existing oversight frameworks must evolve to address the complexity of digital mental health tools while promoting innovation and ensuring safety. 
  1. Committee members will consider a hypothetical case involving an adult with depression who prefers interacting with a generative AI model over a human therapist. They will discuss whether such tools should be prescribed to younger patients or sold over the counter. 
  1. The meeting comes amid legal scrutiny of chatbot use. Several lawsuits claim unsupervised AI interaction contributed to self-harm in minors. 
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