CAIHL read · Jun 10, 2026

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Anguished Parents. Doctors in Tears. Utah's Long Measles Outbreak Takes a Toll.

What CAIHL does

Critical AI Health Literacy (CAIHL) is an analytical lens — Hugo Campos and Liz Salmi's 2025 National Academy of Medicine commentary, "Critical AI Health Literacy as Liberation Technology." It applies Paulo Freire's theory of critical literacy to health AI.

The central question CAIHL asks is whose interests does this AI actually serve? Four dimensions answer it: who is the primary user, where is it hosted, whose interests does it advance, and does it expand or constrain patient agency.

This deep-read separates the four dimensions on a single item from the day's scan, so you can see the specific structural shape of the AI in question — not just the bucket it landed in.

How this item reads through CAIHL

Primary user

patient

Patients, families, and care partners are the primary users of this AI.

Hosting

public

Hosted for public use (ChatGPT, Claude, consumer apps). Anyone with a device can use it.

Interests

patient-aligned

Interest structure prioritizes patients. Operates on a philanthropic, public-service, or advocacy footing.

Agency

expanding

Expands patient capabilities, supports their questions, increases their ability to act on their own values across and beyond health systems.

One-sentence synthesis

First-person reporting on the downstream cost of a degraded information environment; expanding agency through the visibility of the toll.

How this item appeared in the daily scan

Editor's note: The measles outbreak is the disease-side artifact of the vaccine-information environment the patient-AI tools are also helping shape. The parents the reporting names are evaluating AI vaccine information on the same screen the misinformation reaches them.

Summary: KFF Health News: First-person field reporting on the human toll of Utah's prolonged measles outbreak — parents, clinicians, public-health staff describing what the outbreak has cost.

Read the original source →

methodology

Limitations

CAIHL is a lens, not a verdict. The four dimensions are conditions of use — reassess them when a tool's business model, deployment context, or patient behavior changes. See the NAM commentary for the full framework.