Microsoft released Copilot Health, an AI tool that reads your scattered medical data tells you what it means

The new AI health tool connects your wearables, records, and lab results.

Microsoft launched Copilot Health, a dedicated section within its Copilot platform that pulls together personal health data from multiple sources and uses AI to surface patterns and insights. It’s the latest entry in a growing race among tech giants to build trusted health AI.

Typically, health data is scattered across hospital portals, wearable apps, and lab platforms, and none of them talk to each other. Copilot Health connects them into a single profile, then applies AI to find relationships you’d likely miss on your own, like the connection between a dip in your sleep data and a shift in another health trend. . It’s designed to complement—not replace—your doctor, with a focus on helping users arrive at appointments better prepared and better informed.

Copilot Health

Microsoft annouced Copilot Health.

What it connects. Copilot Health integrates with over 50 wearable devices like Apple Health, Oura, and Fitbit to pull in activity, sleep, and vital-sign data. It also connects to health records from more than 50,000 US hospitals and provider organizations through HealthEx, and pulls comprehensive lab results from Function. Users can disconnect any data source at any time.

Microsoft’s consumer products already field over 50 million health queries a day. Copilot Health is designed to improve on that by elevating responses from verified health organizations across 50 countries, with source citations and expert-written cards from Harvard Health. It also connects to real-time US provider directories so users can search for clinicians by specialty, location, insurance, and language.

How the AI works

The platform uses AI to identify connections across your data—flagging things like the relationship between sleep patterns and trends in heart rate—and surfaces those as actionable insights. Microsoft’s internal clinical team developed the product with input from an external panel of more than 230 physicians across 24 countries.

It’s important that when uploading anything online, the information is kept private and secure, especially when it comes to health data. The Copilot Health platform has earned ISO/IEC 42001 certification, the first international standard for AI management systems, meaning a third party has verified how Microsoft builds, governs, and monitors the AI behind it. Health data is stored separately from general Copilot, is not used for model training, and is encrypted at rest and in transit.

Development included an internal clinical team and an external panel of more than 230 physicians across 24 countries. Microsoft also partnered with AARP and the National Health Council to design for a wider range of users.

Where to sign up

Copilot Health is available via waitlist at microsoft.com/copilot/health. The product is currently available via waitlist to adults 18 and older in the US, with an English-only rollout to start.