Tuesday, July 14, 2026

How to get rid of deepfake doctors | And Deepfake Imaging (X-rays)


Imagine a patient who arrives at her doctor’s clinic furious. She shows her doctor a video of him — white coat, plausible exam room, familiar cadence — endorsing an over-the-counter hormone supplement for menopausal symptoms, dismissing standard therapies as “pharma scams,” and offering a discount code.

But the physician never recorded that message. Someone built a deepfake from online recordings, including interviews, webinars, and patient-facing videos, and used the synthetic likeness to sell an unregulated product. This scenario is no longer hypothetical. Investigations have documented AI-generated videos impersonating specific clinicians whom they name to promote supplements and other dubious treatments on major platforms

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Medical misinformation is often treated as a content problem: debunk falsehoods, reduce amplification, pressure platforms to remove harmful posts. Deepfakes push this problem into new terrain. They undermine the credibility that makes digital care, ranging from telehealth visits to patient portals and even social media, possible. And they raise a basic question: What, and whom, can patients trust?

Call this underlying requirement ”epistemic security”: the degree to which clinicians and patients can believe that what they see, hear, and document is authentic enough to act on safely. In digital medicine, that trust rests on three layers: identity (who is speaking), record (what belongs in the chart), and evidence (what we accept as real findings). Deepfakes threaten all three.

First, identity. Deepfake “doctors” exploit the cues patients are taught to trust: a familiar face, a clinic logo, the tone of professional certainty. For patients, it becomes harder to know whether a video featuring their doctor is genuine advice or a persuasive imitation. For clinicians, a second hazard emerges: the “liar’s dividend.” When forgery is plausible, people who did say something reckless can deny authentic recordings as synthetic. The result is not only deception, but degraded accountability. 

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Second, the clinical record and workflow. Consider a voice-cloned “attending” calling overnight to change an opioid dose; a resident, hearing a trusted voice amid urgency and fatigue, complies. Or consider a telehealth encounter for a controlled substance: the patient presents with a synthetic face and a borrowed identity, and the documentation looks routine until a discrepancy triggers review. Deepfake methods also threaten diagnostic media. Researchers have demonstrated that deep learning can tamper with medical images while preserving a clinically plausible appearance. If images, recordings, or screenshots can be manipulated without leaving a trace, the electronic health record risks becoming less a faithful chronicle and more another contested digital artifact, undermining continuity, collaboration, and trust in documentation.

Third, the evidence base. Generative models can create synthetic datasets that, when responsibly governed, may protect privacy or support method development. But the same tools reduce the cost of fabrication. Paper mills already manufacture manuscripts and results at scale, and an investigation published in Nature has described how industrialized fraud and untrustworthy clinical trials already exist in the literature. A future in which bad actors generate a “trial,” complete with convincing tables, figures, and patient trajectories, should not be dismissed as fanciful. Even if fully synthetic randomized trials are not yet documented as being passed off as real-patient evidence, the incentives are obvious: publication, promotion, and profit.

The scale of this problem in routine clinical practice is not yet well measured. But in safety-critical systems, uncertain prevalence is not a reason for complacency. These attacks are cheap, scalable, and asymmetric: They can be created in minutes and may take hours to unwind, with consequences that spill across patients and institutions.

The response should not be framed solely as an arms race to detect every forgery. Detection matters, but adversarial systems evolve. What health care needs is a practical trust infrastructure, or norms and controls that make verification routine. The National Institute of Standards and Technology has emphasized layered approaches — provenance, watermarking, detection, and auditing — because no single method is sufficient.

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Health systems can take near-term steps without waiting for regulation: 
  • Establish trusted channels. Clinical instructions and results must be delivered through the patient portal or a verified phone tree, not screenshots, forwarded videos, or social-media clips.
  • Require verification for high-risk requests. Medication changes, controlled substances, urgent orders, and major care-plan changes should trigger callback verification to a known number or a two-factor check, and the chart should record that it occurred.
  • Treat provenance as patient safety. For high-stakes clinical media such as key diagnostic photographs, select imaging exports, clinician-recorded audio/video, retain a tamper-evident chain of custody showing when the file was created and how it was edited. Emerging standards such as the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) “Content Credentials” point toward how provenance can travel with media.
  • Create a clear escalation pathway. “Suspected synthetic media” should be a one-click report to information security and risk management, so clinicians are not forced to improvise in real time.
  • Train for the conversation. Clinicians need scripts for patients who bring fabricated “doctor videos” into the exam room. Patients need to know where a practice does (and does not) publish advice, and they should be explicitly invited to ask, “Did you actually say this?”

None of this is frictionless. Callback verification, provenance-aware media handling, and new escalation pathways add steps to already burdened clinical workflows, and many health systems will not have the IT infrastructure to implement them seamlessly. But the alternative is to leave frontline clinicians improvising when authenticity is in doubt. The goal should not be perfect verification of every artifact on day one; it should be a pragmatic, risk-based standard for the highest-stakes communications and media.

Regulators and platforms have parallel responsibilities. Using a clinician’s name, image, or credentials in a synthetic endorsement without consent should be treated as a deceptive practice, with liability directed toward those who commission or distribute the content. The Federal Trade Commission’s authority over deceptive advertising offers a ready lever when deepfakes are used as marketing. Journals and regulators should also tighten disclosure expectations when data are synthetic or heavily augmented, and require clear descriptions of how generated data were validated against observed data before clinical claims are made.

Deepfakes shift the burden of trust from recognition to verification. Digital medicine runs on an infrastructure of authenticity that is easy to take for granted — until it fails. We should rebuild that infrastructure now, before patients arrive not only uncertain about what is true, but uncertain about whether their clinician is real.

DEEPFAKE RADIOLOGY


Deepfake images can mislead viewers, upend elections, and instigate violence. They can also, researchers say, disrupt medical care.


In a study published Tuesday in Radiology, an international team of researchers tested whether 17 radiologists could tell the difference between real X-rays and those generated by ChatGPT. Only 41% noticed that anything was awry when they were initially asked to diagnose patients based on the synthetic images. Even once they knew to look out for deepfake X-rays, they only differentiated them accurately 75% of the time. 


 





How to get rid of deepfake doctors | STAT

Monday, July 13, 2026

RFK Jr.’s focus on preventive health panel provokes new fears

Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has his sights set on remaking another influential health panel, one that determines what preventive medical services insurers must cover for free. 

After Kennedy blocked the panel from meeting on multiple occasions, declined to replace members whose terms had expired, and fired its leaders in May, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is finally set to convene in August, potentially with as many as eight new members.    Neither Kennedy nor HHS has publicly offered an explanation of why they are changing the panel or what they think its role should be, raising concerns of political interference into an independent panel which historically has been apolitical. 

The reason(s) are not transparent. Is it due to the economics of providing preventive care, which elevates healthcare costs for Medicare, Medicaid, and private payers?

Political issues such as Red vs. Blue factions also obfuscate the reasons, whether scientific (data) based or economic (budgetary) issues.

HHS did not respond to a list of questions about the secretary’s plans for the task force or why the administration has blocked the release of four recommendations.  

Senior HHS press secretary Emily Hilliard said only that because of an “unprecedented number of nominations received” for new members, the July meeting was postponed until late August “to allow additional time for selection and onboarding” of new members. 

Kennedy has repeatedly criticized the task force, accusing it of poor performance.  

RFK Jr.’s focus on preventive health panel provokes new fears



RFK Jr.’s focus on preventive health panel provokes new fears

Alzheimer's Disease New Therapies under Investigation;'

 

Treatment Advances for Alzheimer’s Disease: 


New medications for Alzheimer’s disease can help manage symptoms or slow the progression of the disease. Learn how these breakthrough treatment options can help improve the quality of life for people with Alzheimer’s disease and their caregivers. An adult woman helps an older adult woman put on a sock. New treatments for Alzheimer’s disease can help reduce symptoms like agitation and slow progression of the disease. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, affecting approximately 7.2 million older adults in the U.S. Until recently, treatment options for Alzheimer’s disease were focused on managing symptoms, rather than treating the disease itself. However, new therapies are helping to target the underlying disease, slowing progression for people living with Alzheimer’s disease. Understanding Alzheimer’s disease Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive brain disorder that slowly affects skills like memory and thinking. In the early stages of the disease, symptoms can include: asking the same questions repeatedly, losing items, showing a lack of judgment difficulty making decisions forgetting about recent events or conversations issues thinking of the right word problems remembering the names of places or objects being hesitant to try new things A person with late-stage Alzheimer’s disease can find it difficult to perform everyday tasks like holding a conversation. As the disease becomes more severe, a person may not be able to communicate and may spend all their time in bed. While Alzheimer’s disease starts with mild memory loss and confusion, a person with a severe form of the disease requires full-time caregiving. People with Alzheimer’s disease generally live an average of 4 to 8 years after diagnosis. However, depending on specific factors, a person can live up to 20 years. On average, Alzheimer’s disease affects people ages 65 or older, but it’s not a typical part of aging. The condition is caused by complex brain changes, primarily the buildup of abnormal amyloid plaques and tau tangles, which lead to cognitive decline.






Neutrofibullary Tangle of. Amyloid Plaque, surrounding a Neural Cell in Brain


The U.S. federal government is currently investing approximately $3.9 billion annually into Alzheimer’s and dementia research. This massive funding is primarily distributed through the National Institutes of Health (NIH), following a finalized $100 million increase signed into law in early 2026. Additional non-profit and private financial commitments augment these federal figures: Alzheimer's Association: Made a record-breaking single-year investment of $112.2 million into scientific investigations in 2025, bringing its active portfolio to over $450 million across 56 countries. Private Philanthropy: High-profile private donors also contribute heavily to the space; for example, Bill Gates has personally invested over $300 million in Alzheimer's research and prevention. 

Track how these funds are distributed by exploring the NIH Professional Judgment Budget or reviewing active projects via the Alzheimer's Association Research Progress tracker. Would you like to know more about: Where the NIH money is specifically allocated (e.g., drug trials, AI research, or early detection). 

None of these proposed therapies reverses the disease.  However, they do slow the progress. 


Thursday, July 9, 2026

10 states where people spend the most, least on health insurance



Americans spend the most on health insurance in West Virginia and the least in Maryland, according to a WalletHub analysis published July 9.

The personal finance company compared the average premiums for a silver health insurance plan with each state’s median household income using June 2026 data from the U.S. Census Bureau and KFF. It calculated insurance costs as a percentage of median monthly household income to rank all 50 states.

The 10 states where people spend the most on health insurance, based on insurance costs as a percentage of median monthly household income:

1. West Virginia — 20.86%
2. Vermont — 19.05%
3. Wyoming — 17.16%
4. Arkansas — 14.87%
5. Mississippi — 14.05%
6. Alaska — 13.18%
7. Louisiana — 12.58%
8. Tennessee — 12.19%
9. Alabama — 11.85%
10. Montana — 11.27%

The 10 states where people spend the least on health insurance:

1. Maryland — 4.66%
2. New Hampshire — 4.77%
3. Massachusetts — 5.49%
4. Virginia — 5.86%
5. Minnesota — 5.89%
6. New Jersey — 6.23%
7. California — 6.32%
8. Hawaii — 6.37%
9. Rhode Island — 6.67%
10. Colorado — 6.72%



10 states where people spend the most, least on health insurance

Why U.S. measles outbreaks have grown harder to extinguish - The Washington Post

Americans spend the most on health insurance in West Virginia and the least in Maryland, according to a WalletHub analysis published July 9.

The personal finance company compared the average premiums for a silver health insurance plan with each state’s median household income using June 2026 data from the U.S. Census Bureau and KFF. It calculated insurance costs as a percentage of median monthly household income to rank all 50 states.

The 10 states where people spend the most on health insurance, based on insurance costs as a percentage of median monthly household income:

1. West Virginia — 20.86%
2. Vermont — 19.05%
3. Wyoming — 17.16%
4. Arkansas — 14.87%
5. Mississippi — 14.05%
6. Alaska — 13.18%
7. Louisiana — 12.58%
8. Tennessee — 12.19%
9. Alabama — 11.85%
10. Montana — 11.27%

The 10 states where people spend the least on health insurance:

1. Maryland — 4.66%
2. New Hampshire — 4.77%
3. Massachusetts — 5.49%
4. Virginia — 5.86%
5. Minnesota — 5.89%
6. New Jersey — 6.23%
7. California — 6.32%
8. Hawaii — 6.37%
9. Rhode Island — 6.67%
10. Colorado — 6.72%






Why U.S. measles outbreaks have grown harder to extinguish - The Washington Post

How your baby communicates

 

Every baby speaks a language before they learn words. The amazing part is that it is the same language worldwide. Before they can talk, babies use five sounds to express what they need. This discovery, made by Priscilla Dunstan, shows that newborns share a universal way of communication through sound reflexes. Here are the five baby sounds and what they mean: 

 1. Neh means “I am hungry.” This sound comes from the natural sucking reflex when babies want to feed.

 2. Owh means “I am sleepy.” It is formed when the mouth opens in a yawn, signaling tiredness and the need for rest. 

 3. Heh means “I am uncomfortable.” Babies use this when something feels wrong, such as a wet diaper, tight clothes, or a temperature change. 

 4. Eairh means “I have gas.” It is a deeper sound that comes from discomfort in the tummy. You might see the baby squirm or pull their knees up. 

 5. Eh means “I need to burp.” A short, gentle sound that comes before small bursts of air leave the chest. When parents learn to recognize these sounds, they begin to understand what their baby is really saying. What once felt like crying now feels like conversation. Listening becomes the first form of love. 


Thursday, July 2, 2026

Axios Future of Health Care- The impact of AI on healthcare cost.

 

1 big thing: Medicare's health tech spending test

As usual, Medicare will cause health care costs to rise in their intenriont to decrease costs.