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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pucci, Giulia, Hemendinger, Emily, Li, Ruizhe, Abercrombie, Gavin, Dinkar, Tanvi, Sinclair, Arabella
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.02444
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Table of Contents:
  • Recent evidence shows that people with eating disorders (EDs) are increasingly seeking guidance, advice, and emotional support from Large Language Model (LLM)-based chat systems. Although these systems are not designed to provide clinical advice, their perceived expertise, neutrality and accessibility make them a frequent, albeit risky, source of support. This paper investigates potential patterns of interaction between users with EDs and LLMs, focusing on the potential harms arising from models that uncritically adapt to, and facilitate unsafe or self-harming user requests. We find, in consultation with clinical ED experts, that specific linguistic cues in prompts increase the likelihood of unsafe responses and, through systematically varying the degree of potential risk present in the user prompt, report the extent to which LLMs uncritically adapt to problematic, and potentially dangerous user inputs.