This AI tool is coming to a doctors' office near you. It claims it will fix the most common GP gripe

This AI tool is coming to a doctors' office near you. It claims it will fix the most common GP gripe

A new AI tool that could slash GP wait times could be coming to a doctors' office near you, but is it just a more powerful version of 'Dr Google'?

Not quite, according to Dr Michael Wright, President of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP).

Australian GPs have been relying on search engines to stay across the latest medical information for years and clinical AI platforms are just the latest tools in their arsenal.

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People sit in doctor's waiting room. One woman looks a medical brochure and a man uses his smart phone to make a call.

"GPs, like everyone else, are really having a close look at AI and trying to work out where it can help us be more efficient, get better information and provide better care," he told nine.com.au.

"But it's certainly not something that anyone should feel like is being forced upon them."

Have you got a story? Contact reporter Maddison Leach at mleach@nine.com.au

About 40 per cent of Aussie GPs are already using AI scribe tools to streamline consultations and thousands will soon have access to new AI platform MedLuma.

GP Dr Stephen Barnett, Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Wollongong, co-founded the AI tool he says will help GPs access the latest medical information quickly and easily.

It pulls from Australian clinical guidelines, peer-reviewed evidence, RACGP-approved content and relevant international literature to respond to GP queries.

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"Some of my doctors in my practice, they've got nine or 10 tabs open trying to search across a whole bunch of different sites, medical guidelines and articles," Barnett told nine.com.au.

"But if you can synthesize those quickly, that helps."

And with a million new articles published in the medical literature every year, it's become impossible for GPs to stay up to date on their own.

MedLuma is set to be rolled out to about 40,000 GP desktops in August, with a broader rollout to follow.

Barnett hopes it will help overworked GPs by speeding up searches and streamlining patient consults.

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The new clinical AI platform is set to roll out across about 40,000 GP desktops later this year.

Some patients are already using general AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini to answer medical queries (with varying success).

But not all Aussies are on board with bringing AI into their medical appointments.

Some are vehemently anti-AI, citing data privacy and environmental concerns.

They have reason to be cautious, especially given how often AI tools hallucinate and confidently spit out false information.

MedLuma says it has human clinical validators to check its information and built-in programs to protect patients' data privacy, but not all AI tools are suitable for clinical use.

Wright said patients can speak to their GP or practice manager if they have any concerns about AI use in their appointments.

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But he also said clinical AI tools like MedLuma will only become more common.

The RACGP, Australian Digital Health Agency and medical insurers are all in the process of developing guidelines to govern how GPs use these AI tools.

"What we really want to make sure is that we use these tools, but we do so safely and with patient care at the centre of it," Wright said.

How the general public will respond to an uptick in AI use at their local medical practice is still to be seen.

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Ex-FBI chief indicted over seashell photo that officials say threatened Trump

Ex-FBI chief indicted over seashell photo that officials say threatened Trump

Former FBI director James Comey has been charged by a federal grand jury after being accused of posting a photo of seashells on social media that made threats to harm US President Donald Trump.

Comey, who served as FBI chief from 2013 to 2017, when he was fired during President Trump's first term, is accused of intentionally posting a photo on Instagram of seashells depicting the numbers "86 47".

The now-deleted post from May last year, which was captioned "cool shell formation on my beach walk", is alleged to be a threat against the life of President Trump.

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At issue is an Instagram post from Thursday in which Comey wrote "cool shell formation on my beach walk" under a picture of seashells that appeared to form the shapes for "86 47."

Merriam-Webster, the dictionary used by The Associated Press, says 86 is slang meaning "to throw out," "to get rid of" or "to refuse service to."

It notes: "Among the most recent senses adopted is a logical extension of the previous ones, with the meaning of 'to kill.' We do not enter this sense, due to its relative recency and sparseness of use."

Comey insisted he meant no harm towards Trump, but the indictment against him alleges otherwise.

"A reasonable recipient who is familiar with the circumstances would interpret [the post] as a serious expression of an intent to do harm to the President of the United States," a Department of Justice statement said.

Comey has been charged with threatening the president, and transmitting a threat in interstate commerce.

If found guilty, he could face up to 10 years' imprisonment.

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FILE - Former FBI director James Comey gestures while speaking at Harvard University's Institute of Politics' JFK Jr. Forum in Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 24, 2020. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

"Threatening the life of the President of the United States is a grave violation of our nation's laws," Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said. 

"The grand jury returned an indictment alleging James Comey did just that, at a time when this country has witnessed violent incitement followed by deadly actions against President Trump and other elected officials," he added, referencing the shooting at a White House ball allegedly targeting President Trump last weekend.

Kash Patel, current FBI director and a Trump ally, insisted Comey's post was "disgraceful".

"As the former Director of the FBI, he knew full well the attention and consequences of making such a post," Patel claimed.

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Comey denied the claims when deleting the post last year, writing, "I didn't realise some folks associate those numbers with violence" and "I oppose violence of any kind so I took the post down."

The criminal case is the second in a matter of months against Comey and is part of the Trump administration Justice Department's relentless effort to prosecute political opponents of the Republican president.

The fact that the Justice Department pursued a new case against the ex-FBI director months after a separate and unrelated indictment was dismissed could expose the government to claims of a vindictive prosecution and to arguments that it is going out of its way to target the former FBI director.

Comey had overseen the early months of an investigation into whether Trump's 2016 campaign had coordinated with Russia to sway the outcome of that year's election.

Reported with Associated Press.

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Cafe makes appeal after CCTV shows woman smashing plate in waitress' face

Cafe makes appeal after CCTV shows woman smashing plate in waitress' face

A Melbourne cafe has released distressing CCTV footage showing a woman knocking a plate into the face of a waitress, in an apparent deliberate act.

La Vallee in Essendon yesterday posted the video online as it sought to identify the woman over what is claims was "abhorrent behaviour".

The waitress, standing outside the cafe on Keilor Road, was left with a chipped tooth during the incident last Friday, about 1pm.

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The footage shows the woman, who wore sunglasses, narrowly avoiding the waitress, before suddenly knocking the plates from her hands.

Described on the cafe's social media posts, as a "grown woman", she then calmly continued walking down the street.

The business is now appealing for public help to identify her.

"We are beyond shocked at this abhorrent behaviour of this grown woman. If you know her please send us a private message."

"This incident led to one of our beautiful staff members CHIPPING THEIR TOOTH from the plate she pushed into her face.

"We love being part of the community in Essendon, and we hope our followers can share, tag and suggest this to local friends so we can get some justice AND hold this person accountable."

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Several people commented on the video shared by the business, including Australia billionaire Adrian Portelli.

"This behaviour needs to be stamped out. It doesn't belong here," he said.

A local Brazilian Jui-Jitsu gym, gforcebjj, offered assistance to the waitress.

"This may not be much, but we would like to offer your injured staff member a 12-month self-defence membership free of charge," they posted.

"This was very disturbing."

A nearby business, Beauty on Rose, said it would check all of its cameras and visit the restaurant with what it has found.

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'Nobody's voted for a cashless society': Thousands to withdraw cash in protest

'Nobody's voted for a cashless society': Thousands to withdraw cash in protest

Aussies around the country will today withdraw cash as part of protest "Cash Out Day", designed to highlight the importance of cash to the lives of millions in Australia.

While cash use has declined in recent years, data released this month by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) showed the number of cash payments had risen to 15 per cent, and that half of all Aussies use cash at least once a week.

The RBA highlighted that older Australians and those in regional areas were more likely to be reliant on cash, and Aussies are being urged to show they still value cash in hand by withdrawing some cash today.

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Jasdon Bryce insisted cash was hugely important to Australia's economy.

Jason Bryce, a financial journalist and supporter of Cash Out Day, claimed it was important for Aussies to show cash is still king.

"Aussies have become increasingly concerned that banks are trying to herd us towards a cashless society," he said.

"Yes we like tag and go, yes we like to use our phone and our cards, but nobody's voted for a cashless society, no one's voted for the government or banks to take our cash away."

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GEN23, Generic, cash payments, shopping, cost of living, wages, withdrawal, atm, armaguard, groceries, in Sydney on April 1, 2024.

Regional communities have been hit by several banks closing branches, further hampering people's access to cash.

And while the federal government introduced a cash mandate this year, requiring businesses to accept cash as payment for essential goods, they have also moved to remove surcharges for card payments.

Bryce claimed the mandate was "way too weak" and said the removal of surcharges will help move people away from cash.

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He said all Aussies should be worried by this news.

"The banks continue to close ATMs and continue to close bank branches, and that's got to stop," he said.

"All of these are bad for the future of cash in our economy. Cash is so important for so many people."

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 Rebel Wilson to testify in film fight with co-star

Rebel Wilson to testify in film fight with co-star

Aussie A-lister Rebel Wilson is set to star in a real-life courtroom drama when she testifies in her high-profile defamation battle against the star of her directorial debut.

The Pitch Perfect star is being sued by Charlotte MacInnes, the Australian lead actor of the musical comedy The Deb.

MacInnes claims Wilson defamed her in four social media posts which claimed she made a sexual harassment complaint and then retracted it to further her career.

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The dispute was sparked when the young actor assisted The Deb's co-producer Amanda Ghost after she suffered a medical episode at Bondi Beach in September 2023.

She helped the producer back to an apartment they were sharing with others and ended up innocently sharing a bath in their swimwear in a bid to warm up, MacInnes says.

Wilson is set to go into the Federal Court witness box today after flying from the United States with her wife, who will also give evidence this week.

Hints about what she might say can be found in sworn statements by MacInnes that have been tendered to the court and contain parts of the older actor's own affidavit.

Wilson is expected to testify about her claim that MacInnes confided in her that Ghost had asked her to have a bath and a shower together, and it made her feel uncomfortable.

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SMH first use. Charlotte MacInnes arrives at Federal Court on Wednesday. She is suing Rebel Wilson for defamation. Wednesday 22nd April 2026. Photo: Sitthixay Ditthavong

MacInnes denies making the complaint, maintaining she later clarified to Wilson the situation had been weird but she was not uncomfortable around Ghost.

In her statement, Wilson says she overheard the producer and young star saying intimate things - often of a sexual nature - to each other, which MacInnes has denounced as untrue.

She also rejected Wilson's account of seeing Ghost push her to go out for a drink together until the young actor relented.

The Bridesmaids star falsely portrayed herself as a whistleblower who spoke up to protect MacInnes when she was actually using the alleged complaint as leverage in a dispute with her co-producers, MacInnes' barrister Sue Chrysanthou SC said.

"I was angry that Rebel claims to be someone who stands up for women … but then was so maliciously and unfairly persisting with a narrative that painted me as a liar, prostitute, sell out, and whore," MacInnes wrote in her affidavit.

Amanda Ghost arriving at the Law Courts complex in, Greens Square, Sydney, NSW, Friday, 24 April 2026. Ms Ghost is appearing to give evidence today in the Rebel Wilson court case. Photo: Sam Mooy / The Sydney Morning Herald

Instead of checking on the alleged victim of inappropriate behaviour, Chrysanthou said Wilson instead shared posts "slagging off" her client.

"This is how this bully, apparently this saviour of women, the protector of the harassed, responds," she previously told the court.

But Wilson had raised her concerns with others even though she had doubts about the veracity of the alleged complaint, her lawyer Dauid Sibtain SC said in his opening address.

The central issue is not whether MacInnes was a victim but instead whether she complained to Wilson and then changed her story, he contended.

"Our case is that ... she changed her story," Sibtain said.

"She did so to ensure her career as an actress and musician progressed by appeasing Ms Ghost."

Sibtain argued MacInnes hasn't suffered any harm to her reputation at all as a result of the social media posts, contrary to her allegations.

It is likely Wilson will face questioning about MacInnes' claim she played a role in a hack on her social media account that led to a nude photo being leaked.

The Hollywood star is also expected to be grilled on whether she was involved in creating malicious websites attacking Ghost that referenced the alleged complaint.

Wilson has been accused of directing a crisis PR team to create the websites, but denies any involvement.

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Police make dramatic casino arrest after reports of 'gun' pointed at car

Police make dramatic casino arrest after reports of 'gun' pointed at car

A Perth man has been charged with multiple offences following a dramatic arrest inside a casino after he was accused of pointing a gun-shaped object at a car.

Police responded to reports that a firearm had been brandished from a white station sedan towards another driver on Teddington Road in Burswood, around three kilometres from the Perth CBD, about 10 am yesterday.

A car matching the description was seen driving into the car park at Crown Casino, before two men exited the sedan and entered the venue.

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Police swarm Perth casino after man accused of pointing gun-shaped object at car

Both men were arrested on the casino floor and taken into custody.

Dramatic bodycam vision captured the moment armed officers swooped on one of the men inside Crown Casino on Sunday morning.

No gun was seen in the casino.

During a later search, police found a novelty cigarette lighter, resembling a firearm, in the toilets of the casino food court.

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A 31-year-old man from Thornlie has since been charged with four offences, including being armed in a way that may cause fear, being armed in or near a place of entertainment, possessing drug paraphernalia in or on which there was a prohibited drug or plant and possession of a prohibited drug.

He was granted bail to appear before the Perth Magistrates Court on May 22.

The second man, aged in his 40s, was released without charge.

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Children rescued when slingshot ride snaps mid air

Children rescued when slingshot ride snaps mid air

Two children were left dangling 90 metres in the air when a cable broke on a slingshot-style ride at a popular Spanish fair.

Social media footage of Friday's emergency at the Seville fair shows the Steel Max ride beginning normally as the riders are catapulted through the air at about 160km/h.

But seconds later, a cable appears to snap from the top of the pole, causing the seat capsule to slam into the opposite pole.

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Onlookers can be heard screaming as the accident unfolds.

The Seville Emergency Service Department said in a Facebook post that four people suffered mild injuries and were treated at the scene.

Spanish media outlet ABS Sevilla reports the two people stranded in the air were children.

After their rescue by civil protection workers, they were later transferred to a health centre, authorities said.

Spanish national police have taken over the investigation into the accident.

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Teenagers who rode on bus roof sought by police

Teenagers who rode on bus roof sought by police

Sydney police are searching for two boys who rode on the roof of a bus through the city's east.

Footage of the incident at 11.40am yesterday shows the teenagers lying on the roof of the 356 bus as it drove from Eastgardens to Bondi Junction.

The pair can be seen perched near the vehicle's rooftop emergency exit hatch.

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The driver stopped the vehicle at Queens Park where the two teenagers immediately got off the vehicle.

Riding on a bus roof - known as 'bus surfing' - is an illegal and dangerous act that has become popularised on social media.

But transport authorities have condemned the pair yesterday for their recklessness, and say they're determined to stamp it out.

"There's nothing harmless about this type of behaviour. It endangers lives and disrupts the safety of our transport network," said Transport for NSW coordinator-general Howard Collins.

"We're committed to working closely with police to put a stop to it.

"Too often, it's young people getting caught up in this, and they're putting themselves and others at serious risk."

Collins also warned 'bus surfers' they risk serious injury or death by striking overhead wires or other infrastructure, such as bridges,

"This could be the last decision you ever make."

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President Trump evacuated after security incident at White House correspondents dinner

President Trump evacuated after security incident at White House correspondents dinner

President Donald Trump has been evacuated after a security incident at the White House correspondents' dinner, Associated Press reports.

The Secret Service and other authorities swarmed the banquet hall as guests ducked under tables by the hundreds.

"Out of the way, sir!" someone yelled. Others yelled to duck.

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Loud sounds resembling gunshots could be heard in CCN vision from inside the dining hall, followed by screams as attendees scrambled for cover.

There are no immediate reports of injuries, according to Associated Press.

Vice President JD Vance and members of Trump's Cabinet who were also in attendance were also rushed out.

U.S. President Donald Trump attends the annual White House Correspondents Dinner at the Washington Hilton, Saturday, March 25, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner)

A source told CNN that Trump is safe. According to an administration official, Cabinet members are OK as well.

Trump attended the high-profile dinner for the first time as president, after skipping the event last year and during his first term in office.

The correspondents dinner gathers politicians and journalists on the last Saturday in April to celebrate the First Amendment and the role of a free press.

-With AP

More to come. 

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US says it's hunting for explosive mines in latest push to open the Strait of Hormuz

US says it's hunting for explosive mines in latest push to open the Strait of Hormuz

President Donald Trump says the US Navy is clearing Iranian mines from the Strait of Hormuz, a vital sea route for oil shipments whose disruption is increasingly threatening the global economy.

Sweeping for underwater explosives could take months despite a tenuous ceasefire between the United States and Iran in the weekslong war, experts say.

Any future claims that the US cleared the waterway where 20 per cent of the world's oil typically passes might fail to convince commercial freighters and their insurers that it is finally safe.

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“You don’t even have to have laid mines — you just have to make people believe that you’ve laid mines," Foreign Policy Research Institute’s National Security Program scholar Emma Salisbury said.

“And even if the US sweeps the strait and says everything’s clear, all the Iranians have to do is say, ‘Well, actually, you haven’t found them all yet,’” said Salisbury, who is also a fellow at the Royal Navy Strategic Studies Centre.

“There's only so much the US can do to give that confidence back to commercial shipping.”

Seeking out mines is one of the latest tactics announced by the Trump administration to get traffic moving again through the strait as rising energy prices and wider economic effects pose a political risk.

The US also has blockaded Iran's ports and seized ships tied to Tehran, but the president said Saturday he had instructed his envoys not to travel to Pakistan for the latest ceasefire talks after Iran's top diplomat left Islamabad.

Hegseth doesn't deny that mine-clearing could take six months

Pentagon officials told lawmakers it would likely take six months to clear the mines that Iran has set in the strait, according a person familiar with the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive information.

The information was delivered during a classified briefing at the House Armed Services Committee on Tuesday.

When asked about the estimate, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters Friday that the military would not speculate on a timeline, but he did not deny it.

“Allegedly that was something that was said,” Hegseth said at a Pentagon news conference. “But we feel confident in our ability, in the correct period of time, to clear any mines that we identify.”

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Trump said he has ordered the Navy to attack any boat laying mines in the strait.

“Additionally, our mine ‘sweepers’ are clearing the Strait right now,” the president said on social media Thursday. “I am hereby ordering that activity to continue, but at a tripled up level!”

Adm. Brad Cooper, the top US commander in the Middle East, recently told reporters that the military would be working to clear mines from the strait. He did not offer details.

There is no indication that the US military is using warships, its most visible mine-clearing assets, in the strait now.

But the Navy also has divers and small teams of explosive ordnance disposal technicians in the region that are capable of clearing mines. They are a less obvious target than a large warship.

Experts also say some mine-clearing equipment could be moved off ships and deployed from land.

It's easier for Iran to lay mines than it is to find them, expert says

It is unclear whether a single mine has been deployed. Iran has mentioned only the “likelihood” of mines in the strait’s pre-war routes.

Estimates of Iran’s mine stockpiles are in the low thousands, said Salisbury, of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Most of its underwater explosives are believed to be older Soviet models. Some of its newer ones may be from China or made domestically.

“Minelaying is a lot easier than minesweeping, so you can literally push these things off the back of a speedboat,” Salisbury said, though she noted the US could likely see that.

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Iran also has small submarines that can lay mines and are much harder to detect, Salisbury added. She said she has not seen indications that they have been destroyed in the war.

If Iran has set mines in the strait, they are not the spiky balls floating on the surface seen in the movies, Salisbury said.

The explosives are likely sitting on the seabed or moored to it by a cable and floating under the surface. They can be triggered by the water pressure changing when a ship passes or by the sound of its engine.

How the US can sweep for mines in the strait

The US Navy now has two littoral combat ships in the Middle East that are capable of sweeping for mines, said a defence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military movements.

Two US Avenger-class minesweepers based in Japan also have departed for the Middle East but were in the Pacific Ocean as of Friday, the official said.

Steven Wills, a retired lieutenant commander who served on an Avenger-class ship, said the Navy is likely looking for sea explosives in order to create a safe channel through the strait.

Minesweeping is a slower process that usually occurs after a conflict.

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“Minehunting is walking through your yard pulling individual weeds and dandelions so that you can walk safely from one side to the other. Minesweeping is more like mowing the grass,” said Wills, an expert at the Center for Maritime Strategy at the Navy League of the United States.

Scott Savitz, a researcher with the RAND Corp. who focuses on naval operations and mine clearing, said the Navy does not necessarily have to remove every last mine.

“There’s still areas that have not been cleared from World War II — and in some cases, World War I — just because it is so resource intensive and it takes a lot of time," he said.

Teams on the Navy's littoral combat ships can deploy remotely operated, uncrewed vehicles that use sonar and other technology to find mines, Wills said. They also carry charges to destroy the explosives.

US Navy ships may also have explosive ordnance disposal teams, including divers, that can hunt for and destroy mines, Wills said. Helicopters can search for mines using lasers.

Shipping companies are weighing the risks

Eventually, shipping companies will be willing to take some risks to travel through the strait “particularly given how lucrative it is,” Savitz said.

Under Iran's approval procedure for vessels wanting to transit the strait, ships must take a different route than before the war — to the north, near Iran's coastline.

Insurers are adding a clause that requires ship owners to contact Iranian authorities to ensure safe passage, said Dylan Mortimer, U.K. marine war leader for insurance broker Marsh.

That certification does not mention mines specifically and is intended to protect against the entire spectrum of threats, including missile and drone attacks or seizures, Mortimer said.

But mines do, at the very least, play a psychological role, a phenomenon Mortimer called the “spectre of threat.”

“That plays in the Iranians' favour, because whether there are mines there or not, people think there’s mines there and they will operate accordingly,” Mortimer said.

Those fears could mean it takes longer to restore confidence that the strait is safe even after the war.