First Medical School to Deploy Private and Secure Tool to All Students
New York, NY, May 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In a national first for a medical school, the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai is providing all medical and graduate students, along with select faculty and staff members, access to OpenAI’s ChatGPT Edu private and secure platform. The move reflects Mount Sinai’s commitment to pursuing innovative approaches to education and research through collaborative learning and scholarly inquiry.
The launch follows a formal agreement between Mount Sinai and OpenAI that safeguards personal health, student, and other sensitive information while delivering secure, accessible, and advanced artificial intelligence (AI) to the Icahn Mount Sinai scholarly community. Through this collaboration, the School enhances its educational toolkit to equip the next generation of physicians and scientists with a cutting-edge solution to succeed in the rapidly evolving health care and science ecosystem.
This latest development further enhances Mount Sinai’s research and learning environment, where students benefit from access to the vast, diverse data generated by a major New York City health system and its research enterprise. This access, combined with advanced technology, provides students with a powerful academic advantage and fosters innovative research opportunities.
“At Mount Sinai, we believe it’s our responsibility not just to adopt emerging technologies, but to do so with care, purpose, and a strong commitment to equity and academic integrity,” said David C. Thomas, MD, MHPE, Dean for Medical Education at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “With robust safeguards in place—including full HIPAA compliance and integrated protections to support safe and appropriate use—our deployment of ChatGPT Edu gives our students the opportunity to engage critically with generative AI. It’s about helping them build the judgment, skills, and ethical grounding they’ll need to lead in a future where AI will increasingly intersect with medicine.”
Students are trained to use the platform as a complement to evidence-based practices, expert guidance, and patient-centered care—not as a replacement. ChatGPT Edu is being used across a variety of educational settings, from helping students strengthen clinical reasoning and understand complex cases to supporting research through data analysis and coding assistance. The platform does not provide medical care or make decisions, but serves as a dynamic learning aid, similar to a digital study partner, with built-in safeguards to ensure responsible and compliant use. Faculty members are also exploring its potential to enhance curriculum development, scholarly work, and innovation in teaching.
“Every student today, regardless of discipline, needs to know how to use AI effectively before entering an increasingly AI-powered workforce. In medical schools, teaching students how to use AI responsibly is even more critical. The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai is setting a powerful example, and we are delighted to work together to deploy ChatGPT Edu to all medical and graduate students,” said Leah Belsky, Vice President and General Manager of Education at OpenAI.
The initiative is guided by the Steering Committee on Teaching, Learning, and Discoveries at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and is supported by the Research and Technologies Team. Core training opportunities on responsible and innovative use of AI are being led by the Gustave L. and Janet W. Levy Library team.
