Amazon is broadening the reach of its artificial intelligence healthcare assistant, making it available directly on its main website and mobile app. The feature, known as Health AI, was previously limited to users of One Medical, the healthcare provider Amazon purchased in 2023 for $3.9 billion. By integrating the assistant into its primary platform, Amazon aims to make digital health guidance more accessible to a wider audience.

Health AI functions as a virtual health companion designed to answer medical questions, help users understand their health data, and assist with everyday healthcare tasks. The system can explain lab reports, schedule appointments, manage prescription refills, and provide general information about symptoms or treatments. According to Amazon, people do not need a Prime membership or a One Medical subscription to start using the assistant.

While Health AI can respond to general medical questions without personal health data, the system is built to become more useful when it can access a user’s medical information. With permission, it can connect to health records through the national Health Information Exchange system, a secure network that allows medical data to be shared between healthcare providers. When granted access, the assistant can review lab results, diagnoses, and prescriptions to deliver more personalized explanations and recommendations.

For example, a user might ask the assistant to clarify cholesterol test results or provide guidance about symptoms such as congestion or a sore throat. In these situations, Health AI analyzes the available medical context and offers explanations tailored to the individual’s health profile.

If a user requires professional care, the assistant can help arrange consultations with healthcare providers from One Medical. In the United States, Prime members who use Health AI may receive up to five complimentary direct-message consultations with a One Medical clinician for common conditions. These include issues like seasonal allergies, flu symptoms, acid reflux, urinary tract infections, pink eye, hair loss, or certain skin concerns. Users without a Prime subscription can still access medical consultations through a pay-per-visit option.

Despite the convenience, the growing use of artificial intelligence in healthcare has raised privacy concerns. Researchers have cautioned that sharing sensitive medical information with AI systems could create risks, particularly if conversations are used for training algorithms. Amazon states that Health AI is trained using generalized data patterns rather than identifiable personal details. For instance, if many users ask about medication interactions, the system may learn from those patterns while keeping patient identities confidential.

Amazon also says that all Health AI interactions occur within a HIPAA-compliant environment, meaning they follow U.S. healthcare privacy regulations. Conversations are reportedly protected by encryption and strict access controls, though the company has not publicly shared full details about how the data security systems operate.

To begin using Health AI, individuals must create or log in to an Amazon Health profile. Once access is granted, they can start conversations with the assistant through the Amazon website or mobile app.

Amazon’s move reflects a larger trend of AI-powered tools entering the healthcare space, as technology companies increasingly explore ways to combine digital assistants with medical support services.

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version