Microsoft's Copilot Health can connect to your medical records and wearables
Briefly

Microsoft's Copilot Health can connect to your medical records and wearables
"Microsoft announced on Thursday that it's launching Copilot Health, a "separate, secure space" in Copilot for asking questions about lab results and medical records, searching for providers, analyzing data from wearables, and other health-related chats. The feature will have a phased rollout, so it won't be available to everyone immediately, but users can join a waitlist to get access."
"Users can import medical records from over 50,000 US hospitals and healthcare organizations through HealthEx, and import lab test results through Function. Copilot Health is also compatible with "over 50 wearable devices," including those from Apple, Oura, and Fitbit. The Copilot Health homepage can show data from wearables, like current step count, as well as reminders for upcoming appointments, depending on what data users choose to share."
"Users can also find medical professionals through Copilot Health. It's connected to "real-time US provider directories" that can help users search for providers based on specialty, location, languages spoken, and insurance plans accepted."
Microsoft introduced Copilot Health, a dedicated secure space within Copilot for health-related inquiries. The feature enables users to decipher lab test results, review medical records, search for healthcare providers, and analyze wearable device data. Users can import medical records from over 50,000 US hospitals and healthcare organizations via HealthEx and lab results through Function. Copilot Health integrates with over 50 wearable devices including Apple, Oura, and Fitbit, displaying metrics like step counts and appointment reminders. The tool connects to real-time US provider directories, allowing users to search for doctors by specialty, location, language, and insurance acceptance. Microsoft emphasizes the tool complements rather than replaces medical professionals and does not provide diagnoses or treatment recommendations.
Read at The Verge
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