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Friday, March 7, 2025

AI-generated ‘doctors’ are duping TikTok users with fake medical advice

 Does an apple a day keep the AI away?

Creators are calling bull on alleged deepfake doctors scamming social media users with unfounded medical advice.

On TikTok, one search yields dozens of videos of women rattling off phrases like, “13 years as a coochie doctor and nobody believes me when I tell them this,” before dishing so-called health secrets for perky breasts, snatched stomachs, chiseled jawlines and balanced pH levels.

But the so-called experts aren’t even real. They’re completely computer-generated by artificial intelligence.

Eagle-eyed TikTokkers have called out alleged AI-generated “doctors” who claim to be experts in the medical field and offer nontraditional advice.TikTok / @locks_health
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Some of the so-called “doctors” might claim to be experts in other fields — diet, plastic surgery, breasts, butts, stomach and more — and offer advice to cure or remedy viewers’ ailments or health concerns.

One account has posted dozens of clips featuring the same woman, who claimed to have spent 13 years as a “coochie” and “butt” doctor. A different account features the exact same woman also spewing unfounded medical advice under the guise of being an alleged “coochie doctor.”

Media Matters reported that the same gaggle of alleged deepfake characters have also appeared as salespeople for wellness products or claimed to have connections to Hollywood to dish insider gossip.

The discrepancies are enough to raise a few eyebrows.

One search for these informational clips yields dozens of results, and navigating to the users’ pages shows multiple videos utilizing the same creator claiming to be a “butt,” “booty” or “coochie” doctor, as well as a dieitian and plastic surgeon.TikTok / @locks_health
One user claimed that the AI personalities come from the app Captions, which offers an generative AI tool for online videos.TikTok / @locks_health

Javon Ford, the creator of his namesake beauty brand, recently revealed that the AI-generated personalities can be manipulated on an app called Captions, which bills itself as a tool to generate and edit talking AI videos. The company claims that it has 100,000 daily users of the app, with over 3 million videos produced every month.

But Ford called the service “deeply insidious.”

“You might have noticed a few of these ‘creators’ on your ‘For You’ page. None of them are real,” he warned.

In a TikTok video, he scrolled through an exhaustive list of AI avatars that users can choose from — such as a woman named “Violet,” who can be seen in many of the “coochie doctor” clips — demonstrating how a script can be written and the avatar will regurgitate it.

Aghast users called the technology “very dangerous,” while some weighed the option of ditching social media altogether due to the “scary” reality of realistic deepfakes.

“I’ve seen Violet so many times,” one shocked viewer commented, while another agreed that they’ve seen her “say she’s a dentist and a nurse.”

“So that’s actually scary! Now that you point it out, I can see through it, but w/o the warning, I may have fallen for it!” someone else admitted.

In an attempt to educate viewers, creators have highlighted the ways to determine if the person on your screen is real or AI-generated as deepfakes proliferate online.

The suspect content creators spew medical advice on various accounts, where they pose as doctors in different fields.TikTok / @brokegirlguides

Ford, for one, called out the “mouth movements,” calling them “uncanny.” He noticed that the lips did not sync with the audio, which he said is the “first red flag.”

“It’s 2025,” he said in a TikTok. “Nobody should be having audio video lag issues.”

He added that their claims — that a product or natural remedy works better than whatever is commonly used — should also raise alarms.

Ford also advised looking at the account owner’s profile to see how many videos feature the so-called “doctor,” who has someone been a gynecologist, proctologist and more over a mere 13 years.

“My, my, they’ve had a productive career,” he joked.

@mr.paidsocial

Replying to @SilisaB #greenscreenvideo #greenscreen LEARN HOW TO SPOT Ai The eyes 👀 The head movements 🥴 The phrasing and pauses 🤐 And the whole picture just gives off this unreal feeling. #ai #aivideo #aicontentcreator #aiinfluencer

♬ original sound – Caleb | Ads | Ai | Automation
Watch on TikTok

One user named Caleb Kruse, an expert in paid media, pointed out the telltale signs of an AI avatar in a previous video on TikTok, using another creator’s content as an example. The woman later confirmed that, while she is, in fact a real person, the video in question was created with AI by a company who had asked to clone her likeness.

In addition to the unrealistic mouth movements, Kruse highlighted the woman’s eyes, awkward head movements and overall vibe of the video or feeling that “it’s not real.”

“The eyes are too big when they shouldn’t be — they’re not always reflecting exactly how a normal person might react when they say things,” he explained.

“Third, is the cadence, how she speaks, how the words between sentences flow,” he continued. “There’s sometimes these weird pauses that you wouldn’t normally say.”

The callouts were a wake-up call for his followers.

“This should be illegal,” one dismayed viewer commented.

“It looks so real its horrifying,” another chimed in.

https://nypost.com/2025/03/07/tech/ai-generated-doctors-are-duping-tiktok-users-with-fake-medical-advice-heres-how-to-spot-a-horrifying-fraud/

Low sperm count -> 500% more likely to be genetically predisposed to cancer

 This isn’t your daddy’s cancer scare.

Studies have previously linked low sperm count to an increased risk of cancer, but new research takes that a step further.

Approximately 1 in 10 men have some sort of fertility issue in the US.Syda Productions – stock.adobe.com

Researchers at the University of Tartu in Estonia found that men with a more general reproductive issue are much more likely to also have genetic variants for cancer.

Sperm counts have dropped by as much as 50% in the last 50 years.NDABCREATIVITY – stock.adobe.com

The warning sign? Infertility.

In men, infertility is defined as not being able to impregnate a woman after a year of having unprotected sex on a regular basis. Causes can range from insufficient or low-quality sperm, injury to the area, blockages and genetic conditions like cystic fibrosis. 

Approximately 1 in 10 men have some sort of fertility issue in the US. Globally, sperm counts have dropped by as much as 50% in the last 50 years. 

In prior studies, both infertile men and their relatives have been observed to have a higher cancer risk, suggesting a potential genetic underpinning.

The new study, published in the journal Human Reproduction Open, attempted to explore this potential genetic predisposition by analyzing the data of 500 men with unexplained fertility problems. 

Previous studies have indicated that men with lower sperm counts face an increased risk of developing cancer.digitalskillet1 – stock.adobe.com
Their findings were striking: Infertile men had five times as much of a risk of hereditary cancer as men who were fertile. 

“We found that among infertile men, every 15th infertile man carried a predisposing genetic variant, compared to one in 64 fertile men,” lead author Anu Valkna, the chair of Human Genetics at the University of Tartu in Estonia, said. 

“This may explain why infertile men have a higher cancer risk — they already have a genetic predisposition that makes the body more susceptible to cancer,” Valkna added.

The researchers also found a link between a family history of cancer and developing the disease.

“This supports the hypothesis that there is a predisposition in these families,” she noted.

The implications of these findings are significant, as men typically “seek medical attention for infertility at a younger age, usually before the progression and diagnosis of cancer,” Valkna said. “Therefore, early identification of predisposed patients would offer effective monitoring and early interventions.” 

“Moreover, since some hereditary cancer syndromes tend to disproportionately affect female family members, additional identification of at-risk family members would offer added clinical value to these families,” she added.

https://nypost.com/2025/03/07/health/men-with-this-issue-are-5x-more-likely-to-have-cancer-markers/