Microsoft brings health data and wearables together in Copilot
Copilot Health is a new, dedicated space inside Microsoft Copilot designed to help people better understand their medical information. Announced by Microsoft, the feature lets users import medical records from more than 50,000 U.S. hospitals and healthcare providers and connect wearable-device data so Copilot can summarize lab results, surface trends, and answer plain-language questions about health data.
Microsoft frames Copilot Health as an empowerment tool rather than a clinical decision-maker. The company stresses that the assistant "doesn't replace your doctor" and is intended to help users interpret reports, prepare for provider visits, and monitor health trends. The feature is described as a "separate, secure space" within Copilot to give users clearer boundaries and privacy for sensitive health conversations.
What users can expect:
- Import and consolidate records from thousands of hospitals and providers across the U.S.
- Analyze wearable data to highlight trends (e.g., activity, sleep, heart metrics)
- Get plain-language explanations of lab results and suggestions for questions to ask clinicians
The rollout will be phased, and Microsoft is opening a waitlist for people who want early access. By bridging clinical records and consumer wearables in a user-friendly interface, Copilot Health aims to make personal health information more accessible and actionable for millions of people while keeping clinical judgment squarely in the hands of licensed providers.