AI compatibility
AI is a solid sexual health educator, but a doctor beats it for personal decisions.
Workable, but read the conditions.
Average across 1 submission.
The honest read
AI can reliably deliver accurate, evidence-based sexual health education — covering contraception, STI prevention, consent, and risk reduction — and this is genuinely useful. However, the task is inherently personal and context-dependent, and for anything beyond general information (e.g., specific symptoms, relationship dynamics, or medical decisions), a human healthcare provider is the right resource.
Aggregated across 1 submission.
The five dimensions
Repeatability
MediumCore safe-sex topics (contraception methods, STI prevention, consent) are structurally consistent and well-documented. However, individual circumstances — health history, relationship context, specific concerns — vary significantly and require tailored responses each time.
Ambiguity Tolerance
LowThe task is vague: 'safe sex' could mean contraception advice, STI education, consent guidance, or personal medical questions. Success criteria are unclear without knowing what the user actually needs, making it hard for an agent to know when it has done enough.
Data & Tool Availability
HighHigh-quality, authoritative sexual health information is publicly available from sources like CDC, WHO, and Planned Parenthood. An AI agent can access and synthesize this content reliably without special permissions.
Error Cost
HighIncorrect or incomplete information about contraception or STI prevention can have serious health consequences, including unintended pregnancy or disease transmission. Errors here are not easily reversible and carry real physical and emotional harm.
Human Judgment Required
HighPersonal medical history, relationship dynamics, emotional context, and individual risk tolerance all require nuanced human judgment — ideally from a healthcare provider. AI lacks the ability to examine, diagnose, or fully understand a person's unique situation.
What an agent would need
- Access to authoritative sexual health sources (CDC, WHO, Planned Parenthood) for accurate, up-to-date information
- Clear scoping of the request — general education vs. personal medical advice vs. relationship guidance
- Guardrails to redirect medical or diagnostic questions to licensed healthcare professionals
- Sensitivity handling for topics involving minors, trauma, or coercion
- Ability to ask clarifying questions to tailor information to the user's actual need
Best-matched agent type
The kind of agent this work would call for if it were a fit. For this task, it isn't.
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