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How AI health care chatbots learn from the questions of an Indian women's organization

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Komal Vilas Thatkare says she doesn't have anyone to ask about her most private health questions. 鈥淭here are only men in my home 鈥 no ladies," said the 32-year-old mother and housewife in Mumbai. "I don鈥檛 speak to anyone here.
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A woman learns to use a chatbot powered by artificial intelligence developed by Myna Mahila Foundation at the local women's organization鈥檚 office in Mumbai, India, Feb. 1, 2024. The chatbot, currently a pilot project, represents what many hope will be part of the impact of AI on health care around the globe: to deliver accurate medical information in personalized responses that can reach many more people than in-person clinics or trained medical workers. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Komal Vilas Thatkare says she doesn't have anyone to ask about her most private health questions.

鈥淭here are only men in my home 鈥 no ladies," said the 32-year-old mother and housewife in Mumbai. "I don鈥檛 speak to anyone here. So I used this app as it helps me in my personal problems.鈥

The app she uses is powered by artificial intelligence running on OpenAI鈥檚 , that Myna Mahila Foundation, a local women's organization, is developing. Thatkare asks the Myna Bolo chatbot questions and it offers answers. Through those interactions, Thatkare learned about a contraceptive pill and how to take it.

Thatkare is one of 80 test users the foundation recruited to help train the chatbot. It draws on a customized database of medical information about sexual health, but the chatbot's potential success relies on test users like Thatkare to train it.

The chatbot, currently a pilot project, represents what many hope will be part of the around the globe: to deliver accurate medical information in personalized responses that can reach many more people than in-person clinics or trained medical workers. In this case, the chatbot's focus on reproductive health also offers vital information that 鈥 because of social norms 鈥 is difficult to access elsewhere.

鈥淚f this actually could provide this nonjudgmental, private advice to women, then it could really be a gamechanger when it comes to accessing information about sexual reproductive health,鈥 said Suhani Jalota, founder and CEO of the Myna Mahila Foundation, which received a $100,000 grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation last summer to develop the chatbot, as part of a cohort of organizations in low- and middle-income countries trying to use AI to solve problems in their communities.

Funders like the Gates Foundation, the Patrick J. McGovern Foundation and Data.org, are seeking to build up this 鈥渕issing middle鈥 in AI development, especially in areas like health and education. These philanthropic initiatives offer developers access to AI tools they otherwise could not afford so they can solve problems that are a low priority for corporations and researchers 鈥 if they are on their radars at all 鈥 because they don't have high profit potential.

鈥淣o longer can the global north and high-income countries drive the agenda and decide what does and does not need to be addressed in local communities in the global south,鈥 wrote Trevor Mundel, president for global health at the Gates Foundation in an October , adding, 鈥淲e cannot risk creating another chasm of inequity when it comes to AI.鈥

The Associated Press receives financial support for news coverage in Africa from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The Myna Mahila Foundation recruited test users like Thatkare to write real questions they have. For example, 鈥淒oes using a condom cause HIV?鈥 or 鈥淐an I have sex during periods?" The foundation's staff then closely monitor the chatbot's responses, developing a customized database of verified questions and answers along the way that helps improve future responses.

The chatbot is not yet ready for wider release. The accuracy of its responses is not good enough and there are issues with translation, Jalota said. Users often write questions in a mix of languages and may not provide the chatbot with enough information for it to offer a relevant response.

鈥淲e are not yet fully sure on whether or not women can understand everything clearly and whether or not it鈥檚 fully medically accurate all of the information that we鈥檙e sending out,鈥 Jalota said. They are considering training some women to help ask the chatbot prompts on behalf of someone else, though still aim to improve the chatbot so it can be released on its own.

Dr. Christopher Longhurst, chief medical officer at the UC San Diego Health, has led the implementation of AI tools in health care settings and said it is important to test and measure the impact of these new tools on patient health outcomes.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 just assume or trust or hope that these things are going to be good. You actually have to test it,鈥 Longhurst said. He thinks the promise of AI in health care is overestimated in the next two to three years, 鈥淏ut I think long term, over the next decade, AI is going to be as impactful as the introduction of penicillin in health care.鈥

Jalota鈥檚 team consulted with other projects funded by the Gates Foundation that were designing chatbots for health care settings so they could solve similar problems together, said Zameer Brey, interim deputy director for technology diffusion for the Gates Foundation.

The Myna Mahila Foundation is also partnering with another Gates grantee to propose developing privacy standards for handling data for reproductive health. The foundation, which is working with an outside technology firm to develop the chatbot, is also considering other steps to help ensure the privacy of users.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been discussing whether we should delete messages within a certain time frame of women sending it to add to this privacy,鈥 Jalota said, as some women share phones with family members.

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AP Technology Writer Matt O鈥橞rien contributed from Providence, Rhode Island.

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Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP鈥檚 collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP鈥檚 philanthropy coverage, visit .

Thalia Beaty, The Associated Press