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Home » Man thought neighbour was poisoning him after taking medical advice from ChatGPT
Health

Man thought neighbour was poisoning him after taking medical advice from ChatGPT

By staff12 August 2025No Comments3 Mins Read

A 60-year-old thought his neighbour was trying to poison him after he became ill with psychosis. He had been taking a chemical following what he said was advice from ChatGPT

In this photo illustration, a person holds a smartphone displaying the ChatGPT logo on its screen in front of a blurred OpenAI logo on August 9, 2025 in Chongqing, China
A man presented with symptoms of psychosis and thought his neighbour was poisoning him(Image: Getty Images)

Experts are warning ChatGPT could distribute harmful medical advice after a man developed a rare condition and thought his neighbour was poisoning him.

A 60-year-old man developed bromism as a result of removing table salt from his diet following an interaction with the AI chatbot, according to an article in the Annals of Internal Medicine journal. Doctors were told by the patient that he had read about the negative effects of table salt and asked the AI bot to help him remove it from his diet.

Bromism, also known as bromide toxicity, “was once a well-recognised toxidrome in the early 20th century” that “precipitated a range of presentations involving neuropsychiatric and dermatologic symptoms “, the study said. It comes after a doctor’s warning to people who drink even a ‘single cup of tea’.

READ MORE: ‘I lost 10st in a year without jabs, surgery or going to the gym’READ MORE: Man, 30, put shoulder pain down to gym aches, then doctors asked where he’d like to die

Salt shaker and pile of spilled salt on concrete stone.
The man said he removed table salt from his diet(Image: Getty Images)

Initially, the man thought his neighbour was poisoning him and he was experiencing “psychotic symptoms”. He was noted to be paranoid about the water he was offered and tried to escape the hospital he presented himself to within a day of being there. His symptoms later improved after treatment.

He told doctors he began taking sodium bromide over a three month period after reading that table salt, or sodium chloride, can “can be swapped with bromide, though likely for other purposes, such as cleaning”. Sodium bromide was used as a sedative by doctors in the early part of the 20th century.

The case, according to experts from the University of Washington in Seattle who authored the article, revealed “how the use of artificial intelligence can potentially contribute to the development of preventable adverse health outcomes”. The authors of the report said it was not possible to access the man’s ChatGPT log to determine exactly what he was told, but when they asked the system to give them a recommendation for replacing sodium chloride, the answer included bromide.

It comes after a doctor's warning to people who drink even a 'single cup of tea'.
Doctors are worried about the ‘spread of misinformation’(Image: Getty Images/Mint Images RF)

The response did not ask why the authors were looking for the information, nor provide a specific health warning. It has left scientists fearing “scientific inaccuracies” being generated by ChatGPT and other AI apps as they “lack the ability to critically discuss results” and could “fuel the spread of misinformation”.

Last week, OpenAI announced it had released the fifth generation of the artificial intelligence technology that powers ChatGPT. ‘GPT-5’ would be improved in “flagging potential concerns” like illnesses, OpenAI said according to The Guardian. OpenAI also stressed ChatGPT was not a substitute for medical assistance.

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