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Understanding Hallucination: Why AI Sometimes Makes Up Medical Information

AI hallucination—confidently stating false information—is particularly dangerous in health contexts because it sounds plausible and people trust it. Knowing why hallucinations happen (the model fills gaps with convincing-sounding patterns rather than admitting uncertainty) helps you spot them and verify critical information against trusted sources.

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Why It Matters

Imagine a coworker who's really confident, speaks fluently, and sounds absolutely certain—but sometimes invents facts without knowing it. That's an AI hallucination.

AI doesn't lie on purpose. It generates text that sounds believable based on patterns it learned. Sometimes those patterns create false information that sounds true. A hallucination is when AI confidently states something that isn't actually true.

Here's a caregiving example: You ask Claude, "Is there a medication called fluridone for anxiety?" It might respond, "Yes, fluridone is commonly prescribed for anxiety," even though fluridone is actually a medication for aquatic plants, not human anxiety. It sounded plausible, so the AI generated it. You could believe it and try to get your parent prescribed a plant medication.

This is why you cannot—ever—use AI as your only source for medical decisions. The AI sounds confident. It looks credible. It's often wrong.

How to protect yourself: Use AI to organize and explore, not to finalize. Ask your AI to summarize questions you should ask your doctor, not to diagnose. Ask it to list possible side effects so you know what to watch for, then verify with actual medical resources. Ask it to explain a diagnosis your doctor gave you, not to diagnose something yourself.

Think of AI like a smart friend who reads a lot. That friend can help you think through problems and suggest angles you hadn't considered. But that friend shouldn't be your doctor, pharmacist, or final decision-maker for care.

A practical safeguard: When an AI gives you medical information, always ask yourself, "Where would this be true?" Look it up. Check medication names on actual pharmacy sites. Verify diagnoses on Mayo Clinic or your provider's website. If the AI was hallucinating, you'll catch it.

The tricky part: hallucinations are most dangerous when they sound most plausible. An obviously wrong answer gets caught. A detailed, confident, slightly-wrong answer doesn't.

Try this: Ask an AI a question where you already know the answer—about your parent's current medications, for example. See if it gets the details right. Notice how it sounds confident even if some details are wrong. That's your reminder: verify medical information.

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