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Home » Google Removes AI Health Summaries After Risky Medical Errors Exposed
Technology

Google Removes AI Health Summaries After Risky Medical Errors Exposed

By dailyguardian.aeJanuary 13, 20263 Mins Read
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We have all been there. You feel a weird pain in your side or get a confusing test result back from the doctor, and the first thing you do is open Google. You aren’t looking for a medical degree; you just want a quick answer to “am I okay?” But recently, Google had to pump the brakes on its AI search summaries because, as it turns out, asking a robot for medical advice might actually be dangerous.

Google quietly scrubbed a bunch of AI-generated health summaries from its search results after an investigation revealed they were giving out inaccurate and frankly scary information. This all started after a report by The Guardian pointed out that these “AI Overviews“—the colorful boxes that pop up at the very top of your search—were serving up incomplete data.

The most glaring example was about liver blood tests

If you asked the AI for “normal ranges,” it would just spit out a list of numbers. It didn’t ask if you were male or female. It didn’t ask about your age, your ethnicity, or your medical history. It just gave a flat number. Medical experts looked at this and basically said, “This is dangerous.”

The problem here isn’t just that the AI was wrong; it’s that it was dangerously misleading. Imagine someone with early-stage liver disease looking up their test results. The AI tells them their numbers fall within the “normal” range it scraped from some random website. That person might think, “Oh, I’m fine then,” and skip a follow-up appointment. In reality, a “normal” number for a 20-year-old might be a warning sign for a 50-year-old. The AI lacks the nuance to know that, and that gap in context can have serious, real-world consequences.

Google’s response was pretty standard—they removed the specific queries that were flagged and insisted that their system is usually helpful. But here is the kicker: health organizations like the British Liver Trust found that if you just reworded the question slightly, the same bad information popped right back up. It’s like a game of digital whack-a-mole. You fix one error, and the AI just generates a new one five seconds later.

The real issue here is trust

Because these AI summaries sit right at the top of the page, above the actual links to hospitals or medical journals, they carry an air of authority. We are trained to trust the top result. When Google presents an answer in a neat little box, our brains subconsciously treat it as the “correct” answer. But it’s not. It’s just a prediction engine trying to guess what words come next.

Google

For now, this is a massive wake-up call. AI is great for summarizing an email or planning a travel itinerary, but when it comes to your health, it clearly isn’t ready for prime time. Until these systems can understand context—or until Google puts stricter guardrails in place—it is probably safer to scroll past the robot and click on an actual link from a real doctor. Speed is nice, but accuracy is the only thing that matters when you’re talking about your health.

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