
Medicine and Science from The BMJ Is the NHS in danger of making misinformation worse?
Mar 13, 2026
Nnena Osuji, consultant haematologist and NHS trust CEO, brings clinical and leadership insight. Kamila Hawthorne, former RCGP chair, speaks on general practice and continuity of care. Deborah Cohen, investigative journalist, explores how online platforms reshape health behaviours. They discuss health influencers, AI chatbots, access pressures, digital literacy, and how systems and clinicians shape trust and misinformation.
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Ask Patients What Dr Google Said And Explain Why
- Invite patients to disclose what online tools they used and explain why you do or don't worry about findings.
- Nnena Osuji uses the NHS app and blood count examples to give context so patients learn and ask better questions next time.
More Information But Greater Public Confusion
- More information hasn't reduced confusion; people are more uncertain about which sources or platforms to trust.
- Deborah Cohen cites Ipsos polling showing rising information volume alongside rising public confusion.
Triangulate AI Answers With Clinical Reasoning
- Clinicians should triangulate AI outputs with first principles, physiology, and their expertise before accepting them.
- Nnena Osuji warns a little AI knowledge is dangerous and recommends human oversight and cautious use.



