Artificial intelligence (AI) is something that more and more patients are relying on and looking to for information about their symptoms or conditions.

Not everybody trusts it. Not everybody loves it. Nor should they, given how new some of the uses for AI are. But it’s not too early to get to know more about how AI can play a helpful role in the provision of care.

Still, surveys conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago have found that trust levels of AI among the public relative to other sources still lags -- that could change.

About 1 in 5 U.S. adults trust AI health information roughly the same as information from family members, friends and employers, said Amelia Burke-Garcia, PhD, director of the Center for Health Communication Science at NORC. And 15% reported trusting AI ju

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