口頭答覆 · 2026-02-27 · 屆國會 15

AI聊天機器人用於青少年心理諮詢的風險與監管

AI 安全與倫理 AI 治理與監管 AI 與醫療 爭議度 2 · 溫和質詢

議員Dr Charlene Chen質詢政府如何監測青少年使用AI聊天機器人進行心理諮詢的趨勢,以及保護弱勢使用者的措施。衛生部高階政務部長許寶琨回應:AI聊天機器人已無處不在,追蹤其在心理健康方面的使用已不切實際。他明確指出,生成式AI聊天機器人不適合替代合格的心理健康服務提供者,因其存在誤導資訊和不當回應風險,可能造成傷害。但年輕人使用這些工具是因為匿名性和24/7可用性。政府的策略是推廣合法替代資源(如mindline 1771、mindline.sg、CHAT),並通過《線上安全實踐守則》要求應用商店實施年齡驗證措施(2026年3月底前)。

關鍵要點

  • AI聊天機器人已無處不在,追蹤使用不切實際
  • 生成式AI不適合替代合格心理健康服務
  • 年輕人使用因匿名性和24/7可用性
  • 推廣mindline等合法替代資源
  • 應用商店須實施年齡驗證措施
政府立場

不適合監管禁止,轉而推廣合法替代與教育

政策訊號

AI心理健康應用採取引導而非禁止策略

參與人員 (2)

完整譯文(中文)

Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02

2 陳嘉玲醫生問協調社會政策部長兼衛生部長,鑑於青少年和年輕人越來越多地使用人工智慧(AI)聊天機器人進行諮詢和心理健康支援,(a) 衛生部如何監測這一趨勢;(b) 有哪些措施引導使用者在適當情況下尋求合格的心理健康服務;(c) 正在考慮哪些保障措施以保護易受影響的使用者?

衛生部高階國務部長(許寶琨醫生)(代表協調社會政策部長兼衛生部長) :先生,人工智慧(AI)聊天機器人現已無處不在,跟蹤其在諮詢或心理健康支援中的使用已不切實際。

一般來說,使用生成式人工智慧(GenAI)聊天機器人替代合格的心理健康護理提供者是不合適的。AI聊天機器人並非設計用來處理心理健康問題或提供心理健康狀況的治療,在處理嚴重心理健康危機時可能提供錯誤資訊或不當回應,反而可能造成傷害。

但根本上,年輕人和許多有心理健康問題的患者有時會尋求這些線上聊天機器人,因為它們提供匿名性,並且全天候24小時易於獲得和訪問。我們的做法是鼓勵尋求合格心理健康服務的個人接觸我們的“心理健康第一站”服務,如全國心理熱線1771、mindline.sg、社群外展團隊和CHAT。我們提供這些資源,使其成為合法的替代選擇,讓那些尋求匿名和易訪問優勢的人們能夠轉向合法渠道,獲得我們確認合法的同類服務,並能獲得適當的後續轉介,獲得CHAT之外所需的護理。

我們線上提供的這些資源也更符合本地需求。我相信這具有明顯優勢。但我們需要做的是加強教育,使這些資源更易獲得,並提升公眾對這些資源的認知,讓他們轉向這些合法資源,而不是依賴他們能找到的線上聊天機器人。

雖然執法不可行,但已有保障措施保護年輕使用者的網路安全。根據《網路安全行為準則——應用分發服務》,必須最大限度減少使用者接觸這些服務上的有害內容。指定的應用商店也須在今年3月31日前實施年齡驗證措施。數字內容開發者也應遵守《生成式人工智慧模型治理框架》,確保對青少年和兒童負責任地開發和應用AI。

此外,信息通信媒體發展局(IMDA)的“數字技能生活框架”包括如何使用生成式人工智慧及管理其潛在風險的內容。個人可通過現有資源按自己的節奏學習。

議長 :陳醫生。

陳嘉玲醫生(淡濱尼) :感謝高階國務部長的答覆。我有三個補充問題。鑑於大型語言模型(LLMs)可能用於訓練資料、幫助人們更好理解資料,衛生部如何評估潛在的資料隱私風險?是否會考慮保障措施或知情同意標準以保護易受影響的使用者?

第二,鑑於AI系統可能過度肯定使用者觀點,實際上可能強化有害思維,且過度依賴可能減少實際尋求幫助的行為,衛生部是否評估過這類風險?

最後,我很高興高階國務部長提到跨文化差異。衛生部是否願意支援研究,以瞭解如何更好地使用AI諮詢工具及其對新加坡心理健康結果的影響?

許寶琨醫生 :先生,感謝議員提出的相關且深思熟慮的問題,這確實是一個越來越多公眾,尤其是年輕人關心的重要議題。

關於第一個問題,如何評估資料隱私及是否需要知情同意,我認為首先,我們上線的許多資源,如mindline.sg,是基於匿名原則運作的。因此,在匿名的情況下,實際上無法進行知情同意,這樣尋求幫助的人無需擔心其資料被洩露。我們想給他們的保證是,首先,匿名性確保你線上向諮詢師或聊天機器人透露的任何資訊都無法追溯到個人。這是第一點。我們也希望確保獲得此類護理的門檻儘可能低。

關於第二個問題,這些聊天機器人是否過度肯定使用者觀點,尤其是有自殺傾向者,是否會強化其採取行動的想法,我想介紹一下我們在mindline.sg使用的服務,這是“心理健康第一站”之一,是一個數字平臺,使用基於Wysa的聊天機器人。它是一個專門的心理健康AI聊天機器人。該機器人引導使用者進行數字治療練習,如正念、深呼吸技巧、睡眠衛生實踐,這些均受認知行為療法原則啟發。它旨在補充我們現有的專業諮詢和治療服務,作為一個全天候可用的“口袋治療師”,消除尋求幫助的障礙,並引導求助者到本地人工資源。

但為了讓議員放心,與生成式AI聊天機器人不同,Wysa設計為通過基於規則的模型提供數字治療練習。它不是那種極具創造性、能提出新建議的聊天機器人。它遵循一個結構化的決策樹,由臨床醫生開發並持續驗證。Wysa聊天機器人已通過臨床評估,驗證其有效性、安全性和影響。

因此,我希望這能讓議員放心,我們提供的資源是合法的,風險已得到管理。我們將繼續探索如何改進這些資源。

關於第三個問題,是否支援研究評估結果,正如我所說,這些資源剛推出約一年左右。我們將隨著時間推移收集資料,分析我們公開提供的這些干預措施的影響,以便更好地瞭解如何提升它們。 [ 請參閱《衛生部高階國務部長澄清》,官方報告,2026年2月27日,第96卷,第21期,書面宣告更正部分。 ]

英文原文

SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02

2 Dr Charlene Chen asked the Coordinating Minister for Social Policies and Minister for Health in view of the increasing use of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots for counselling and mental health support by teenagers and young adults (a) how the Ministry is monitoring this trend; (b) what measures are in place to guide users towards qualified mental health services where appropriate; and (c) what safeguards are being considered to protect vulnerable users.

The Senior Minister of State for Health (Dr Koh Poh Koon) (for the Coordinating Minister for Social Policies and Minister for Health) : Sir, artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots have become so ubiquitous now that it is no longer practical to track its use for counselling or mental health support.

In general, it is not appropriate to use generative AI (GenAI) chatbots as a replacement for a qualified mental health care provider. AI chatbots are not designed to address mental health issues or provide treatment for mental health conditions and risk providing misinformation or inappropriate responses when dealing with serious mental health crises, and may cause harm instead.

But fundamentally, young people and many patients with mental health issues sometimes seek out these online chatbots because of the anonymity it offers and also because it is easily available and accessible, 24/7. Our approach is to encourage individuals seeking qualified mental health services to approach our First Stop for Mental Health services such as national mindline 1771, mindline.sg, Community Outreach Teams and CHAT. We put forth these resources so that they become the legitimate alternatives that those seeking the same advantages of anonymity and easy accessibility can now go to a legitimate source to get the same kind of services for which we know is legitimate, and they can get proper referrals onwards as well, to the care that they need beyond CHAT.

These resources which we put online are also more contextualised to our local needs. I believe there is a distinct advantage. But what we need to do is to do a lot more education, and make these resources be more available and make awareness for these resources be elevated amongst the public so that they go to these legitimate resources, rather than rely on the online chatbots that they can find.

While enforcement is not practical, there are safeguards in place to protect younger users online. Under the Code of Practice for Online Safety – App Distribution Services, users’ exposure to harmful content on these services must be minimised. Designated app stores are also required to implement age assurance measures by 31 March this year. Digital content developers are also expected to comply with the Model AI Governance Framework for Generative AI to ensure responsible development and application of AI for youths and children.

Additionally, the Infocomm Media Development Authority's (IMDA's) Digital Skills for Life framework includes content on how to use GenAI and manage its potential risks. Individuals can learn at their own pace through the available resources.

Mr Speaker : Dr Chen.

Dr Charlene Chen (Tampines) : I thank the Senior Minister of State for his responses. I just have three supplementary questions. Given that Large Language Models (LLMs) may be used to train the data, train and help people understand the data better, how does the Ministry assess potential data privacy risks, and are there going to be safeguards or informed consent standards being considered to protect vulnerable users?

The second one is, given that AI systems may overly affirm users' views, which may actually reinforce harmful thinking, and also over reliance may reduce actual help seeking behaviours, has the Ministry assessed this risk?

And lastly, I am glad that the Senior Minister of State has mentioned cross-cultural differences. Is the Ministry willing to support studies to understand how AI counselling tools can be used better and how their impact will be on mental health outcomes in Singapore?

Dr Koh Poh Koon : Sir, I thank the Member for her pertinent questions and thoughtful questions on this very important issue that increasingly many people in public, especially young people, are concerned about.

On her first question on how can we assess data privacy and whether informed consent is needed, I think in the first instance, many of these resources we put online, such as mindline.sg, works on the basis of anonymity. So, you cannot really do an informed consent when you want it to be anonymous, so that the person seeking help does not have to worry about his or her data being exposed. The assurance we want to give to them is that first of all, the anonymity already ensures that none of these things that you actually divulge to the counsellor online or to the chatbot can be traced back to the individual. So, that is the first thing. And we want to make sure that the barrier to access this care is something that is as low as possible.

On the second question on whether these chatbots overly affirm users' views, especially those who may have suicidal ideation, and whether that will reinforce the person to end up taking action, let me just give a little bit more insight on what we use in mindline.sg, one of the First Stops for Mental Health services, which is a digital platform that uses a chatbot. It is a chatbot based on Wysa. It is a specialised mental health AI-enabled chatbot. This chatbot then guides users through digital therapeutic exercises such as mindfulness, deep breathing techniques, sleep hygiene practices that are inspired by cognitive behavioural therapy principles. It aims to supplement our existing professional counselling and therapy services by serving as a 24/7 available pocket therapist that removes any barriers towards help seeking and signpost help seekers to local human-based resources.

But just to reassure the Member, unlike GenAI chatbots, Wysa is designed to deliver such digital therapeutic exercises via a rule-based model. It is not something like the chatbot itself can be extremely creative and come up with a new suggestions. There is a rule-based model in it, so the conversation follows a structured decision tree, which is developed and continuously validated by clinicians. The Wysa chatbot has been clinically evaluated for its efficacy, safety and impact.

So, I hope this gives the Member assurance that the resources that we make available are legitimate. It has got its risks managed. We will continue to see how we can improve such resources.

The third question on whether we will support any studies to measure the outcomes, like I said, these resources were just started just about a year or so ago. We will see over time how we can collect data and then, analyse the impact of some of these interventions we put in the public domain, to make sure that we have a better insight on how to enhance them. [ Please refer to ​ " Clarification by Senior Minister of State for Health ", Official Report, 27 February 2026, Vol 96, Issue 21, Correction By Written Statement section. ]