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by heinrichhartman
354 days ago
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> The real question is can they do a better job than no therapist. That's the option people face.
> The answer to that question might still be no, but at least it's the right question. The answer is: YES. Doing better than nothing is a really low hanging fruit. As long as you don't do damage - you do good. If the LLM just listens and creates a space and a sounding board for reflection is already an upside. > Until we answer the question "Why can't people get good mental health support?" Anyway. The answer is: Pricing. Qualified Experts are EXPENSIVE. Look at the market pricies for good Coaching. Everyone benefits from having a coach/counseler/therapist. Very few people can afford them privately. The health care system can't afford them either, so they are reserved for the "worst cases" and managed as a parse resource. |
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That second sentence is the dangerous one, no?
It's very easy to do damage in a clinical therapy situation, and a lot of the debate around this seems to me to be overlooking that. It is possible to do worse than doing nothing.