Share what is happening
Use plain language to describe AI-related paranoia, chatbot distress, unusual beliefs, panic, sleep loss, or other changes you are seeing.
Treatment navigation for families and individuals
A private first step for people dealing with paranoia, unusual beliefs, severe anxiety, sleep loss, or distress connected to AI, chatbots, or online experiences.
Start here
Most people finish this in under two minutes.
How it works
Use plain language to describe AI-related paranoia, chatbot distress, unusual beliefs, panic, sleep loss, or other changes you are seeing.
We look at location, urgency, insurance or payment needs, and whether outpatient psychiatry, therapy, intensive care, residential care, or inpatient care may fit.
You can receive follow-up about possible care resources, what to ask, and how to move forward safely.
For people looking for help
You do not need to know the right diagnosis or treatment setting before reaching out. The intake is designed for people who are worried, tired, embarrassed, or trying to help someone they love.
AI psychosis treatment options
People use phrases like AI psychosis, chatbot psychosis, AI-induced psychosis, AI-related paranoia, or delusions from AI when an online experience seems connected to a frightening change in thoughts, sleep, mood, behavior, or safety. Those phrases are not a diagnosis. They are a way of describing symptoms that should be reviewed by a qualified mental health professional.
The right treatment option depends on what is happening now: how intense the beliefs feel, whether the person is sleeping, whether substances may be involved, whether there are hallucinations, whether there is risk of harm, and what kind of support is available nearby. This intake helps organize those details so follow-up can focus on practical next steps.
Help finding care when conversations with AI systems seem connected to fear, fixation, panic, or loss of sleep.
Navigation for people concerned about persecutory beliefs, delusions, suspiciousness, or feeling controlled or watched.
Support identifying whether outpatient therapy, psychiatry, intensive outpatient care, residential treatment, or inpatient care may be appropriate.
A private way for family members to describe what they are seeing and ask what level of mental health support may make sense.
What this service is
AI Psychosis Treatment is a private intake for people who need help understanding what kind of mental health support may be appropriate. You can describe what is happening in your own words and request a follow-up about possible care resources.
We review the intake, look at urgency and location, and follow up with plain next steps.
This form does not diagnose, replace a clinician, or serve as emergency care.
Your information is used to respond to your request. It is not for advertising retargeting.
Questions
AI psychosis treatment generally means professional mental health care for psychosis-like symptoms, paranoia, delusions, severe anxiety, sleep loss, or distress that a person connects to AI, chatbots, or online experiences. This site helps people request treatment options and care-resource follow-up; it does not diagnose or provide emergency care.
A licensed clinician can assess paranoia, delusions, hallucinations, sleep loss, substance use, safety risk, and other factors, then recommend an appropriate level of care such as outpatient therapy, psychiatry, intensive outpatient treatment, residential care, inpatient care, or crisis services.
Seek immediate crisis support if there is danger, threats, weapons, command hallucinations, inability to sleep for multiple nights, severe confusion, or concern that someone may harm themselves or someone else. Call 911 or 988 in the United States.
No. The intake is built for people who are unsure whether they are seeing psychosis, anxiety, mania, substance-related symptoms, trauma responses, sleep deprivation, or another concern. A qualified clinician must make diagnostic and treatment decisions.
AI Psychosis Treatment is not a medical provider, crisis service, or substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Information submitted here may be used to help identify possible care resources. In an emergency, call 911 or 988.