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Microsoft launches Copilot Health to decode your medical data

Microsoft is rolling out Copilot Health through a US‑only waitlist, starting with adults who are comfortable linking health records and wearables to an AI layer.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 12, 2026, 1:44 PM EDT
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A blurred, abstract landscape of green and teal tones with soft streaks of yellow and purple flowers, overlaid with the white text “Copilot Health” centered prominently in a clean, modern font.
Image: Microsoft
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Microsoft is taking a big swing at consumer health with Copilot Health, a new “medical intelligence” space inside Copilot that promises to finally make sense of the piles of health data we’ve all been quietly collecting for years. It doesn’t try to replace your doctor — instead, it aims to make every appointment, every lab result, and every late‑night “what is this symptom” moment a little less confusing.

If you’ve ever stared at a blood test PDF without understanding what any of the numbers mean, you’re exactly the kind of person Microsoft is targeting here. Copilot Health lives as a separate, secure area inside Copilot where you can pull in your electronic health records, wearable data (think Apple Health, Oura, Fitbit, etc.), lab results, and basic health history, then ask questions in plain language. Microsoft says it can connect to records from more than 50,000 US hospitals and provider organizations through a platform called HealthEx, plus comprehensive lab tests from partner Function, turning what used to live in scattered portals and apps into a single, query‑able profile. The idea is simple: instead of just seeing that your LDL is “high,” you can ask Copilot what that means, how it fits with your sleep patterns and activity levels, and what kinds of follow‑up questions you might want to bring to your clinician.

On the information side, Microsoft is leaning hard on credibility as a differentiator. The company already handles over 50 million consumer health questions a day across services like Copilot and Bing, and says it has started prioritizing answers from vetted health organizations in 50 countries. In Copilot Health, responses come with clear citations, links back to source material, and “answer cards” written with Harvard Health, so users can see where guidance is coming from instead of relying on opaque AI summaries. In the US, Copilot also plugs into real‑time provider directories, letting you search for doctors based on specialty, location, language, and accepted insurance — essentially turning Copilot into a smarter front door to the healthcare system, not just a symptom checker.

Under the hood, Copilot Health is also a glimpse into Microsoft’s bigger bet on what it’s calling “medical superintelligence.” The company’s research projects, including the Microsoft AI Diagnostic Orchestrator (MAI‑DxO), are designed to spot patterns in complex health data and support more proactive insights — for example, connecting weeks of broken sleep with other risk factors in your record instead of treating each datapoint in isolation. Microsoft’s own description is ambitious: a health AI that eventually combines the breadth of a general physician with the depth of a specialist, though the company stresses that new features built on this work will only roll out after clinical evaluation and with clear labelling around what the system can and can’t do.

Given the sensitivity of health data, Microsoft spends a notable amount of time talking about privacy and guardrails. Copilot Health runs in an isolated environment, separate from general Copilot, with additional access controls, encryption in transit and at rest, and settings that let you disconnect data sources or delete information when you want. Microsoft explicitly says data from Copilot Health is not used to train models — a line also taken by rivals like OpenAI for their health products — and it highlights an external advisory panel of more than 230 physicians from over 24 countries helping to shape safety and clinical realism. The service has also been certified under ISO/IEC 42001, a relatively new standard for AI management systems, which Microsoft is using as a shorthand proof that its AI governance for Copilot Health has been independently audited.

All of this lands in a suddenly crowded space. Copilot Health launches just as OpenAI’s ChatGPT Health and Anthropic’s Claude for Healthcare are vying to become the default AI layer for medical questions, while Google works on Gemini‑powered partnerships like its deal with health management platform b.well. Microsoft’s angle is to tightly integrate consumer health with its existing Copilot ecosystem and broader healthcare investments, including tools like Dragon Copilot for clinicians and Copilot integrations inside EHR workflows, effectively trying to cover both sides of the exam room — patients and providers. It’s a reminder that health is likely to be one of the most strategically important arenas for AI companies over the next few years: whoever becomes the trusted intermediary between people, their data, and their doctors gains a powerful position in the market.

For now, Copilot Health is rolling out slowly. There’s a waitlist, with early access limited to adults 18 and older in the United States, English‑only at launch, and a “careful, phased rollout” as Microsoft tunes the experience with early users. The company is working with groups like AARP and the National Health Council to ensure the product is usable for older adults and people with chronic conditions, which makes sense given how often those groups interact with the healthcare system. And Microsoft is very clear about a crucial boundary: Copilot Health is not meant to diagnose, treat, or prevent diseases and is not a substitute for professional medical advice — something users will likely see repeated throughout the product as regulators sharpen their focus on health AI.

In practical terms, Copilot Health is what happens when the “ask me anything” promise of a general‑purpose AI assistant finally meets the messy reality of your medical record. If Microsoft can balance usefulness with safety and earn long‑term trust, Copilot Health could evolve from a smarter way to decode lab results into a default interface for navigating everything from finding a new doctor to preparing for a specialist visit. The open question is whether people are ready to let a tech giant sit at the center of their most personal data — and whether regulators, clinicians, and patients will agree on where to draw the line between “medical intelligence” and medicine itself.


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