The Typing Cure: Experiences with Large Language Model Chatbots for Mental Health Support
This addresses the problem of mental health support accessibility for users of AI chatbots, highlighting both benefits and risks, but it is incremental as it builds on existing psychotherapy literature.
The study investigated how people use Large Language Model chatbots for mental health support, finding that users create unique support roles and fill care gaps, but also face risks and cultural limitations, leading to recommendations for ethical design.
People experiencing severe distress increasingly use Large Language Model (LLM) chatbots as mental health support tools. Discussions on social media have described how engagements were lifesaving for some, but evidence suggests that general-purpose LLM chatbots also have notable risks that could endanger the welfare of users if not designed responsibly. In this study, we investigate the lived experiences of people who have used LLM chatbots for mental health support. We build on interviews with 21 individuals from globally diverse backgrounds to analyze how users create unique support roles for their chatbots, fill in gaps in everyday care, and navigate associated cultural limitations when seeking support from chatbots. We ground our analysis in psychotherapy literature around effective support, and introduce the concept of therapeutic alignment, or aligning AI with therapeutic values for mental health contexts. Our study offers recommendations for how designers can approach the ethical and effective use of LLM chatbots and other AI mental health support tools in mental health care.