The New Reality of Googling Your Symptoms
The other night, I did what so many of us do when something feels off: I Googled it. Not a 2 a.m. WebMD spiral; just a quick scroll while brushing my teeth. Within seconds, an AI-generated summary appeared at the top of the page, confidently explaining what my symptom probably meant. It looked polished. Official. Comforting. And still, something about it made me hesitate.
Because AI doesn’t hedge the way humans do. It doesn’t say this depends or bodies are complicated or maybe check in with someone who went to medical school. It just delivers answers — clean and authoritative — which can feel comforting until you remember how often women’s health already lives in the gray: under-researched, under-explained, and too often underbelieved.
We’re living in an era where many of us are handing our worry, curiosity, and late-night spirals over to algorithms trained on… the internet. And while the web is great for product reviews and dinner inspiration, it’s a shakier place to land for medical guidance. When AI gets health information wrong, it doesn’t just confuse people; it can delay care, minimize symptoms, or offer false reassurance when someone should be paying closer attention.
Most of the time, what women actually need isn’t a definitive answer. It’s help slowing the spiral and figuring out the next right step. Health information shouldn’t escalate fear or shut down curiosity. It should leave us supported enough to ask better questions… with nuance and humanity baked in.