HomeEverything
Equities & FundsCrypto & Digital AssetsAI & TechnologyBusiness & CorporateUS Politics & PolicyGeopolitics & Global RiskMacro, Rates & FXCommodities & EnergyEuropean Politics & MarketsAsia-PacificReal Estate & Property
← All Stories

Frequent AI chatbot use linked to belief in anti-vaccine myths, poll finds

Created at 30 Jun · 7:35 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A KFF poll found that US adults who frequently seek health advice from AI chatbots are more likely to believe vaccine myths, including links to autism and DNA alteration. This correlation persisted even when controlling for demographic factors.

✉Newsletter

PiQ Daily

Pick your topics. Get only what matters, on your cadence.

Key Numbers

2,480US adults polled
35%frequent AI users believing MMR-autism link
20%non-AI users believing MMR-autism link
29%frequent AI users believing mRNA-DNA link
22%frequent AI users believing measles vaccine is more dangerous than virus
15%non-AI users believing measles vaccine is more dangerous than virus
37%social media users believing MMR-autism link
16%non-social media users believing MMR-autism link
$90,000annual household income threshold for AI users

Who's Involved

KFF
health research firm that released the poll
Robert F Kennedy Jr
associated with the anti-vaccine movement
OpenAI
AI firm acknowledging health queries on ChatGPT

↳ Why This Matters

The findings highlight a potential public health concern regarding the spread of medical misinformation through AI chatbots, particularly as more individuals turn to these tools for health advice.

Key facts

  • Adults in the US who frequently seek health advice from AI chatbots are more likely to believe vaccine myths.
  • 35% of frequent AI users believe MMR vaccines cause autism, compared to 20% of non-users.
  • 29% of frequent AI users believe mRNA vaccines can change DNA, compared to 20% of non-users.
  • 22% of frequent AI users believe the measles vaccine is more dangerous than the measles virus, compared to 15% of non-users.
  • Adults who use social media for health information at least weekly are more than twice as likely to believe the MMR-autism myth compared to those who don't use social media for health.

Adults in the US who frequently seek health advice from artificial intelligence chatbots are more likely to believe myths about vaccines, according to a poll released on Tuesday by health research firm KFF. The survey, conducted in May and polling a representative sample of 2,480 US adults, found that use of AI tools and chatbots correlated with belief in falsehoods such as vaccines causing autism or that the measles vaccine poses more danger than the corresponding virus. The connection remained while controlling for factors such as age, race, education and political partisanship.

Concern over how AI may spread misinformation and influence public opinion has long been an issue among researchers and health officials. A large percentage of Americans have begun turning to AI chatbots for medical advice, with another KFF survey from March finding that about a third of US adults seek out health advice from AI. AI firms have also acknowledged the prevalence of queries about medical matters, with OpenAI stating that health is one of the most common uses of ChatGPT.

Among US adults who use AI tools to find health information at least once a week, KFF’s poll found that 35% of them believe that it is “definitely or probably true” that measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccines have been proven to cause autism in children. Only 20% of US adults who do not use AI for health hold a similar belief, while 29% of US adults who occasionally consult AI for health believe that myth. The falsehood that MMR vaccines cause autism is a key pillar of the anti-vaccine movement, which has gained additional influence after the Covid-19 pandemic and appointment of Robert F Kennedy Jr as the US health secretary. Kennedy and others associated with the anti-vaccine movement have long used debunked or retracted medical studies to advance their views.

The KFF poll additionally found that 29% of US adults who frequently use AI tools for health believe that mRNA vaccines can change your DNA, which is not true, whereas only 20% of people who never use AI hold that belief. Among frequent AI users, 22% believe that the measles vaccine is more dangerous than the measles virus – compared with only 15% of people who do not use AI for health.

Consulting social media platforms for health advice also correlated with belief in misinformation around vaccines in the poll’s results. KFF found “adults who use social media for health information at least weekly are more than twice as likely as those who don’t use social media for health to say the myth linking MMR vaccines to autism is ‘probably’ or ‘definitely true’ (37% v. 16%)”. The poll also found a split between which demographics sometimes look to social media for health advice versus who consults AI. Lower income groups and people with less than college education are more likely to seek out advice via social media, while a higher percentage of people in households making above $90,000 per year or who possess a college education turn to AI tools. The KFF poll did not ask which AI models respondents used while seeking out health advice. Different chatbots produce varying levels of misinformation, and each contains its own biases as a result of training data and respective companies’ decisions on how the bots should respond to divisive questions. Using chatbots to find health information continues a longstanding pattern in how people use search engines: about 5% of all Google searches concern health, and about 77% of people use search engines to ask about new diagnoses, according to a 2025 research paper by a Georgetown University researcher.

Frequently asked questions

The poll found that US adults who frequently use AI chatbots for health advice are more likely to believe in vaccine myths compared to those who do not use AI for health information.

Frequent AI users were more likely to believe that MMR vaccines cause autism, that mRNA vaccines can alter DNA, and that the measles vaccine is more dangerous than the measles virus.

Yes, the correlation between frequent AI use for health advice and belief in vaccine myths remained even after controlling for factors like age, race, education, and political partisanship.

Both frequent AI use and frequent social media use for health advice correlate with belief in vaccine misinformation, though demographic patterns differ in who uses each platform.

What Happens Next

01AI firms may need to implement stricter content moderation for health-related queries.
02Public health organizations may increase efforts to combat AI-generated health misinformation.

Get the newsletter.

Pick the topics you actually care about. We'll email when there's news worth your time, on the cadence you choose. Cancel any time from your account.

Cadence

How It Developed

A KFF poll found a correlation between frequent AI chatbot use for health advice and belief in vaccine misinformation.
Frequent AI users were more likely to believe MMR vaccines cause autism (35% vs. 20% of non-users).
Frequent AI users were also more likely to believe mRNA vaccines alter DNA (29% vs. 20% of non-users).
Belief that the measles vaccine is more dangerous than the virus was also higher among frequent AI users (22% vs. 15% of non-users).
Consulting social media for health advice also correlated with belief in vaccine misinformation.
Lower-income and less educated individuals were more likely to use social media for health advice, while higher earners and college-educated individuals were more likely to use AI.

Sources

T1
Frequent AI chatbot use linked to belief in anti-vaccine myths, poll findsThe Guardian

Related Stories

AI Spending Correlates With Job Growth, Ramp Study Finds
30 Jun · 8:25 PM
AI browsers can be tricked into compromising user data
30 Jun · 8:05 PM
Proton's AI Chatbot Lumo Receives Major Upgrade
30 Jun · 2:10 PM
Agentic AI may require regulatory reform, BOE's Breeden says
30 Jun · 12:34 PM
Acti launches AI-powered smartphone keyboard
30 Jun · 6:15 PM