Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Journal of Medical Internet Research - American Medical Association Shares Framework to Address the Escalating Risk of Physician Deepfakes


American Medical Association Shares Framework to Address the Escalating Risk of Physician Deepfakes

American Medical Association Shares Framework to Address the Escalating Risk of Physician Deepfakes

Authors of this article:

Shalini Kathuria Narang, JMIR Correspondent

As AI becomes more sophisticated, new risks are emerging. In this News and Perspectives article, JMIR Correspondent Shalini Kathuria Narang reports on the American Medical Association’s response to the rising issue of physician deepfakes.

Key Takeaways:

  • Deepfakes created to impersonate doctors, manipulate the public, and endorse unproven treatments pose threats to patients and the broader health care system.
  • The American Medical Association has released a new policy framework to establish clear, enforceable protections for physicians against unauthorized AI-generated deepfakes.
  • Some states’ legislatures in the United States have passed laws to discipline vendors where an AI chatbot is engaged in the practice of medicine or is impersonating a human engaged in the practice of medicine.

A deepfake is a video, photo, or audio recording that seems real but has been manipulated with AI. The underlying technology can replace faces, manipulate facial expressions, and synthesize speech, depicting humans appearing to say or do something that they have never said or done.

AI-generated deepfake “doctors” impersonating physicians garner millions of views on social media, misleading the public and endorsing unproven treatments. The content typically promotes products for their creators’ financial gain while exposing the viewers to scams that erode the patient-physician relationship, undermine confidence in evidence-based care, and put the public at risk of harm.

According to the factchecking organization Full Fact, hundreds of AI-generated deepfakes of real doctors and academics to promote health products with bogus endorsements are damaging the reputations of those they impersonate and could lead to people making decisions about their health based on fake claims.

“[The] mental health space is an area of big concern, including significant privacy concerns, more with some of the general purpose chatbots claiming to help support mental health. We know many, many, many individuals and patients are using these chatbots for support that can cross the line and be dangerous, as we’ve seen suicides and bad outcomes related to the use of these chatbots in certain ways,” says Shannon Curtis, JD, Senior Director of Policy Development for the American Medical Association (AMA) Center for Digital Health and AI.

She adds that the AMA is looking for solutions to begin addressing the issue, including transparency to help users understand that they’re not actually engaging with a licensed clinician.

“We want to see a prohibition on chatbots from claiming they’re a licensed professional, or that they’re providing equivalent services as a licensed professional,” says Curtis. “We have called for more action to update our regulatory structure... A call for new, updated, appropriate regulatory oversight structures that can help provide that clarity and consistency for consumers, for physicians, for the industry, about what needs to be regulated, and what does not. And hopefully, turning that into a more appropriate, risk based regulatory system that fits where AI is, and hopefully fits where it is going.”

As AI chatbots become more sophisticated, and more harms are realized, it is likely more states will create regulations and exercise enforcements.

Responding to the escalating risk of AI deepfakes, and recognizing that existing privacy, employment, and intellectual property laws do not adequately address AI deepfake risks in clinical contexts, the AMA Center for Digital Health and AI has created a policy framework to modernize physician identity protections and close legal gaps to uphold patient safety, professional integrity, and public trust.

The framework is built on 7 policy principles:

  • Physician identity as a protected right: A physician’s name, image, likeness, voice, and digital replicas are protected interests and should not be used beyond the scope of the clinician’s consent.
  • Prohibition on deceptive medical impersonation: AI-generated or altered content falsely conveying a physician’s endorsement, authorship, or medical judgment likely to mislead in a health-related decision must be prohibited.
  • Informed, opt-in, and revocable consent: Use of a physician’s identity in AI-generated or manipulated content requires affirmative, informed, opt-in consent.
  • Mandatory transparency and labeling: AI-generated or altered content depicting a physician must be clearly labeled. Patients interacting with an AI-generated health professional must be alerted before the interaction.
  • Shared responsibility to prevent impersonation: All participants—platforms, hospitals, health systems, and AI vendors—share responsibility for preventing identity misuse.
  • Enforcement and practical remedies: Processes must be in place to allow physicians to document, escalate, and address identity misuse. Institutions and platforms must facilitate investigation and escalation.
  • Minimizing administrative burden: Protecting physician identity should be a default that doesn’t place any undue burden on the physician.

“AI deepfakes that impersonate physicians are not just scams—they are a public health and safety crisis,” said AMA CEO John Whyte via a statement. “When bad actors exploit a doctor’s identity, they undermine patient trust and can steer people toward harmful, unproven care. We need strong action by federal and state lawmakers to protect physicians’ identities, ensure transparency, and stop this fraud. Safeguarding professional integrity is essential to preserving trust and delivering high-quality care in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.”

The new AMA framework aims to guide how the organization works with government officials and industry partners to stop AI-generated deepfakes of physicians. The AMA is eager to collaborate with lawmakers, regulators, and industry to protect patients and doctors from these risks.

“We were seeing a lot of physicians having their names stolen. It’s turning up on things like academic papers, that they had no part of. Our framework seeks to address those issues by creating a prohibition and requiring affirmative, opt-in consent from the physician in question if their name, image likeness, voice, etc, is going to be used going forward,” says Curtis.

While the framework currently functions as a set of guidelines, Curtis notes that the AMA intends for it to lead to enforceable standards.

“Via the policy framework, we are seeking to create statutory or legal obligations that would prohibit a third party from creating a digital replica or a deepfake that utilizes a person’s name, image, likeness, or voice in a nonconsensual way,” she says.

She emphasizes the importance of enforcement mechanisms like statutory or regulatory requirements on the platforms that end up hosting this content and enforcement by a government agency like the Federal Trade Commission for those bad actors that are creating the deepfakes and disseminating them.

“Data privacy is a huge issue that is sometimes not well understood by individuals. We’d like to see some more action to help protect patients’ personal health information,” says Curtis. The AMA is collaborating with other groups to support the notice-and-removal obligations in the Take It Down Act and a growing coalition in support of the enactment of the NO FAKES Act.

Regulating medical practice typically falls under the jurisdiction of state medical boards in the United States. In addition to a recent landmark lawsuit filed by the Governor of Pennsylvania against Character.AI, some states’ legislatures have passed laws—for example, AB 489 in California, HB 2748 in Oregon, and the Conversational AI Safety Act in Nebraska—to discipline vendors where an AI chatbot is engaged in the practice of medicine or is impersonating a human medical professional.





Connecticut doctors caution against microwaving fidget toys due to risk of burns

 

Connecticut doctors caution against microwaving fidget toys due to the risk of burns

Health officials are warning about children burning themselves after microwaving gel-filled fidget toys. 

A new trend circulating online is prompting children to microwave squishy, gel-filled toys, which can be found and purchased at many stores nationwide. 

Doctors in Connecticut said they have seen a case or two of burns in children as a result, even causing a second-degree burn in one instance.



The doctors said these types of burns are a little different because the sticky substance inside sticks to the skin and will continue burning until you get it off. Their message — just don’t heat them up.

“Not putting things in the microwave that weren’t designed to be microwaved, that’s not the way the toy was designed to be used,” Dr. Alisa Savetamal, the medical director of The Connecticut Burn Center, said. “We have no idea how hot it gets. Be aware of these TikTok trends; they cannot be as fun as you think.”

If a child does suffer a burn from a toy like this, or even something else, the best immediate remedy is to run the skin under cool water. While some small burns can be managed at home, if you’re concerned, go to the doctor, as this type of injury can leave a scar.

Medicaid work requirements challenged by coalition of 26 states

Medicaid work requirements put into place by the President Donald Trump-backed One Big Beautiful Bill Act are being challenged in federal court by a coalition of states, seeking to block a Final Rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that outlined how they would be implemented.

The lawsuit, led by California and Massachusetts, is joined by Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin, representing both “blue” and “red” states, showing that the work requirements have some bipartisan opposition in state governments.

In a press release, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell said the interim final rule from CMS—published on June 3—is failing to protect the list of exclusions to the work requirements that Congress put in place to “ensure that people with serious illnesses and disabilities do not lose coverage or face interruptions in care.”

According to Campbell, speaking on behalf of the plaintiffs, CMS’s rule is an “abrupt change” that, if allowed to stand, would “make it significantly harder for vulnerable individuals to qualify for exclusions from the Medicaid work requirements and harder to maintain Medicaid coverage.” 

The sticking point is how the term “medically frail” is defined—a key category that would allow an individual access to Medicaid regardless of their status as an employee or a student.   Being medically frail generally refers to having a serious or chronic physical, mental, or medical condition that makes it hard to sustain steady work or perform normal daily activities without significant help. [1]

Under federal and state policies (such as recent Medicaid work requirement exemptions), the term specifically includes individuals who: [1, 2]
  • Are blind or have a disability as defined by the Social Security Administration.
  • Have a substance use disorder (SUD).
  • Suffer from a disabling mental health condition.
  • Have a physical, intellectual, or developmental disability that significantly impairs their ability to perform Activities of Daily Living (ADLs).
  • Live with serious or complex medical conditions, such as cancer or HIV. [1, 2]
Could you tell me what specific program or situation (e.g., Medicaid, Medicare, or a life insurance policy) you are checking this for? I can help you find the exact guidelines and exemption forms that apply to you.

CMS’s requirement would force people who are in need of healthcare services to find specialty jobs to accommodate them, where none may exist, the plaintiffs argue. The states contend that the agency appears to be trying to ensure this exemption is effectively nullified.

“The Trump Administration’s attempt to impose new, burdensome requirements on Medicaid recipients threatens access to healthcare for our most vulnerable residents and families,” Campbell said in a statement. “Congress made clear that people with serious medical conditions should not lose coverage.”

“We are asking the court to block these unlawful provisions to protect Medicaid recipients and prevent needless strain on Massachusetts’ healthcare system.”

Burden of proof

As for the specifics of the legal challenge, the states are asking a court to force CMS to change the rule, contending that it violated the Administrative Procedure Act and bypassed Congress’s intent to add real safeguards for Americans to access safety net healthcare services. 

Further, the coalition says states will be left holding the bag, dealing with the fallout from a population with significant medical needs that can’t access Medicaid because of the overly strict federal mandates, particularly a reporting burden that effectively forces states to prove a citizen is “medically frail.”

The lawsuit has yet to be heard in front of a federal judge.



Medicaid work requirements challenged by coalition of 26 states

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

 

She Struggled To Get a Lifesaving Drug Even After Insurers Vowed To Help

LADUE, Mo. — Over four consecutive days in January, Margaret Hvatum ran a 5K, a 10K, a half-marathon, and a full marathon. The 70-year-old covered a combined distance that’s nearly equivalent to running the length of Manhattan four times. 


By the end of the month, she was in a hospital bed.

Hvatum, a part-time computer science professor, has a weakened immune system due to a rare condition known as primary immunodeficiency, which makes it difficult for her body to fight infections. Prior to her 2005 diagnosis, she had four bouts of shingles, a painful rash caused by a virus.

For more than a decade, she relied on an expensive medicine to treat her chronic condition — and relied on her insurance to pay for it.

Then the denial letters came.


The Medical Service

To give her weakened immune system a boost, she relies on Hizentra, which is made up of antibodies collected from donated blood plasma.

At her home, near St. Louis, Hvatum can administer the complex medicine herself. She uses a large syringe to draw the medicine from a vial and loads the syringe into a plastic apparatus that looks like a toy Nerf gun. She cranks a blue plastic dial that triggers a steady drip of the medicine, and it snakes through plastic tubing until it enters her leg through a needle.

The Bill

$8,141.94: The full charges for a 28-day supply of Hizentra without insurance coverage.

After her Medicare Advantage plan through Humana denied payment for the drug in January, she missed several weekly doses.


The Billing Problem: Prior Authorization

Hvatum got tangled up in the controversial process known as prior authorization, which often requires patients or their medical team to get an insurance company’s approval before obtaining medicines or treatment. 

At the start of the year, after Hvatum switched Medicare Advantage plans, she received a letter saying that Humana, her new carrier, had denied her “prior authorization prescription request” for Hizentra. The authorization from her previous insurer didn’t carry over. 

Without the medicine, Hvatum developed a urinary tract infection that sent her to the emergency room on Jan. 30. Though it is a common infection, her doctor advised her to go there because people with her condition can get sick and deteriorate quickly, she said. 

That ER visit turned into an overnight hospital stay. That turned into hospital charges of more than $18,000, and again her insurance denied payment, saying this time that she wasn’t sick enough to require hospital care.

Hvatum’s experience with prior authorization is not unique.


Medicare Advantage plans reviewed nearly 53 million prior authorization requests in 2024, according to KFF. That’s equivalent to nearly two reviews for every person enrolled in the program.

It’s common for Medicare Advantage plans to deny payment for care — which helps them make a profit, said Carrie Graham, director of the Medicare Policy Initiative at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms.

The government pays a monthly sum to Medicare Advantage insurers to cover care for each member. “They make a profit if the care that person receives in that year is less than the amount they receive,” Graham said.

More than half of eligible Medicare beneficiaries choose Medicare Advantage insurance coverage. In 2026, roughly 35 million selected one of these private policies offered by insurance companies.

Humana is a dominant player in the space. Nearly half of all Medicare Advantage enrollees nationwide are covered by UnitedHealth Group or Humana, according to KFF.

The killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson prompted renewed scrutiny of prior authorization. Last summer, months after his death, the nation’s largest insurers, including Humana, signed a pledge that outlined a handful of commitments to ease the burden on patients.

For example, insurers vowed to reduce the number of services that would require prior authorization approval. They also promised to reduce delays by honoring existing prior authorizations for a 90-day period when patients switched plans.

That’s not what happened in Hvatum’s case.

Humana said this pledge to honor existing approvals comes with limitations. “These commitments are for medical services only and do not apply to prescription medications,” spokesperson Mark Taylor said.  

Humana declined to comment on the specifics of Hvatum’s case, even though she agreed to waive her privacy rights, giving the insurer permission to comment.

While acknowledging that the prior authorization process can be deeply frustrating for patients, Humana said it “builds important checks and balances into the healthcare system by verifying that treatments and care delivery are in the best interest of patient safety and quality of care, while safeguarding taxpayer dollars.”

In July 2025, Humana said it would remove one-third of prior authorization requirements for outpatient services.

“We are committed to making the process faster and more seamless for patients and providers,” Humana said in a statement Taylor provided to KFF Health News.

The Resolution

Hvatum appealed, and Humana in late January reversed its initial payment denial for Hizentra, enabling her to afford her medicine again.

But the approval came with a catch: It expires at the end of the year, after which she would need to obtain approval all over again.

Hvatum has since switched to a different drug — and she might not stick around for any more medical-bill fights like this one. She and her husband are considering a move to Norway, a place with universal healthcare. He is a citizen there, which could give her a path to public health coverage.

The industry’s promises to change are too little, too late for Hvatum. 

By her account, she has done her part. Running is her outlet, maybe an obsession, and it keeps her healthy. Scores of medals and trophies are tucked about her home. Some sit on a white wicker end table, next to family photos, candles, and framed St. Louis Cardinals memorabilia. Above a large bay window in the kitchen, medals hang from ribbons of all colors, made to look almost like custom window drapery.

“I have done everything I possibly can to be healthy,” Hvatum said, sitting at her dining room table in her running gear. Her printed T-shirt read, “If found on ground, please drag across the finish line.”

The Takeaway

Data show patients should appeal prior authorizations because those who do often have their denials reversed, Graham said. In fact, 81% of Medicare Advantage appeals were partially or fully overturned in 2024, according to KFF.

Relatively few people appeal, because “it’s an exhausting process,” Graham said. It puts the onus on patients — and doctors get frustrated, too.

It’s not just Medicare Advantage plans that subject enrollees to prior authorization approvals. It’s prevalent in other types of coverage, and it has prompted blowback from the public. Graham believes the public outcry instigated the industry’s pledge to change.

Hvatum is well-versed in filing appeals. She submitted another appeal to Humana after the insurer denied payment for her January hospital stay. Humana again reversed its denial of payment in her case.

Hvatum blames Humana for her January trip to the hospital. Had Humana approved her Hizentra, she said, she could have avoided hospital care altogether.

In March, she had a stroke. Humana denied coverage of that hospital stay, too.

Humana determined that it was not reasonable for the physician who admitted Hvatum to think she would need to stay at least two nights, the threshold for approval. “You had a small stroke,” Humana’s denial letter stated.

Hvatum noted the letter was dated March 25, two days after she was hospitalized. Humana reversed its denial two weeks after Hvatum appealed.

“They love to send you the denials fast,” Hvatum said. “Approvals take longer.”

Bill of the Month is a crowdsourced investigation by KFF Health News and The Washington Post’s Well+Being that dissects and explains medical bills. Since 2018, this series has helped many patients and readers get their medical bills reduced, and it has been cited in statehouses, at the U.S. Capitol, and at the White House. Do you have a confusing or outrageous medical bill you want to share? Tell us about it!

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Signs of Early Dementia


 When most people think about early dementia warning signs, they think about forgetting names or getting lost. But researchers say the sign that appears earliest and gets missed most consistently is something almost nobody is watching for.


It is a loss of SMELL.

Specifically, the gradual inability to detect or identify familiar odors like coffee, flowers, and cleaning products appears years before any memory symptom surfaces.
A landmark study from the Rush Memory and Aging Project found that older adults who scored in the bottom 10% on smell identification tests were more than twice as likely to develop Alzheimer's disease over the following years. The reason is that the olfactory bulb, the brain's smell processing center, is one of the first regions where amyloid plaques accumulate in Alzheimer's disease. It is essentially a window into the brain's earliest pathological changes, visible years before cognitive symptoms emerge.
A simple smell test called the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test is available through neurologists and some primary care offices. It takes 15 minutes. It is not routinely offered. Ask for it by name.

  • UPSIT (University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test): A widely used 40-item, multiple-choice scratch-and-sniff test considered a gold standard in the United States.

  • Other Olfactory Tests


  • Other readily observable changes are
  • Micrographia (smaller handwriting
  • Slowness of gait

  • Share this with someone who keeps saying their aging parent seems a little off but cannot explain why. ❤️





    Monday, June 29, 2026

    Medical device industry continues to turn to AI | MedTech Dive

    More medical device companies are integrating artificial intelligence into their products as the technology advances.

    Imaging machines now use deep learning to speed up scans and flag potential lesions for radiologists. AI is also used in wearable devices to detect heart arrhythmias and in software systems to predict the risk of sepsis in hospitalized patients. 

    As the proliferation of AI in the medtech industry continues, questions remain about the efficacy of these technologies, how they should be regulated and how to mitigate the risk of bias when used in patient care. 



    Professional photo of David Niewolny
    A man looking at papers while working
    A person hits a soccer ball with their head while wearing a wristband.
    A person stands behind a podium and speaks.





    Medical device industry continues to turn to AI | MedTech Dive