Anthropic Debuts Claude for Healthcare Following OpenAI's Lead
Anthropic introduced Claude for Healthcare on January 11 at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference. The launch of these HIPAA-ready enterprise tools and consumer health record features came just days after OpenAI debuted ChatGPT Health.
This timing is strategic. Both AI companies are competing to secure a foothold in the healthcare sector, where high-stakes decisions and vast data pools present major commercial opportunities. With this move, Anthropic positions Claude as a direct competitor in a market niche OpenAI recently targeted.
Claude for Healthcare offers models fine-tuned for medical applications, built-in connections to industry resources like the CMS Coverage Database and ICD-10 codes, and a HIPAA-compliant infrastructure for businesses. Early partners include Banner Health, Stanford Healthcare, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi, AbbVie, and Genmab.
Consumer Health Records Come to Claude
The consumer features represent Anthropic's most substantial entry into personal health data. U.S. subscribers on the Pro and Max plans can now link their health records through a collaboration with HealthEx, a startup that aggregates data from more than 50,000 healthcare providers.
The integration employs the Model Context Protocol—an open standard Anthropic created for linking AI to external data—to securely fetch pertinent sections of a user's medical history. Instead of importing complete records, Claude asks only for categories relevant to the query, such as medications, allergies, recent lab results, or clinical notes.
Beta integrations with Apple Health and Android Health Connect are launching this week via Claude's mobile apps. Health information shared with Claude is not stored in the model's memory and will not be used to train future systems. Users can modify or revoke access at any time.
"Once connected, Claude can summarize a user's medical history, explain test results in simple terms, identify trends across fitness and health data, and help formulate questions for doctor visits," Anthropic explained. The goal is to make discussions between patients and physicians more efficient.
Draft clinical trial protocols with Claude
Related article
AI Experts Deployed: Large Models Take Over Factories, Industrial Manufacturing Enters New Evolution
On the front lines of biological fermentation, architectural design, and even wastewater treatment, a new kind of "employee" is quietly reshaping traditional manufacturing. These aren't workers covered in sweat—they're industrial time-series control
Google Photos brings Clueless's iconic closet to life with AI
Google Photos announced a new AI-powered feature on Wednesday that will soon turn photos of your clothes into a digital closet, letting you create fresh outfit combinations and even virtually try them on. The concept clearly draws inspiration from Ch
Red Fruit Short Drama Accused of Using AI to Steal Ordinary People’s Faces; No Official Response
The short video industry is currently facing a controversy involving AI-related infringement. Red Fruit Short Drama’s production "The Peach Hairpin" has been accused of using AI to "steal faces"—taking the likenesses of ordinary people without permis
Related Special Topic Recommendations
Comments (0)
0/500
Anthropic introduced Claude for Healthcare on January 11 at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference. The launch of these HIPAA-ready enterprise tools and consumer health record features came just days after OpenAI debuted ChatGPT Health.
This timing is strategic. Both AI companies are competing to secure a foothold in the healthcare sector, where high-stakes decisions and vast data pools present major commercial opportunities. With this move, Anthropic positions Claude as a direct competitor in a market niche OpenAI recently targeted.
Claude for Healthcare offers models fine-tuned for medical applications, built-in connections to industry resources like the CMS Coverage Database and ICD-10 codes, and a HIPAA-compliant infrastructure for businesses. Early partners include Banner Health, Stanford Healthcare, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi, AbbVie, and Genmab.
Consumer Health Records Come to Claude
The consumer features represent Anthropic's most substantial entry into personal health data. U.S. subscribers on the Pro and Max plans can now link their health records through a collaboration with HealthEx, a startup that aggregates data from more than 50,000 healthcare providers.
The integration employs the Model Context Protocol—an open standard Anthropic created for linking AI to external data—to securely fetch pertinent sections of a user's medical history. Instead of importing complete records, Claude asks only for categories relevant to the query, such as medications, allergies, recent lab results, or clinical notes.
Beta integrations with Apple Health and Android Health Connect are launching this week via Claude's mobile apps. Health information shared with Claude is not stored in the model's memory and will not be used to train future systems. Users can modify or revoke access at any time.
"Once connected, Claude can summarize a user's medical history, explain test results in simple terms, identify trends across fitness and health data, and help formulate questions for doctor visits," Anthropic explained. The goal is to make discussions between patients and physicians more efficient.
Draft clinical trial protocols with Claude
AI Experts Deployed: Large Models Take Over Factories, Industrial Manufacturing Enters New Evolution
On the front lines of biological fermentation, architectural design, and even wastewater treatment, a new kind of "employee" is quietly reshaping traditional manufacturing. These aren't workers covered in sweat—they're industrial time-series control
Google Photos brings Clueless's iconic closet to life with AI
Google Photos announced a new AI-powered feature on Wednesday that will soon turn photos of your clothes into a digital closet, letting you create fresh outfit combinations and even virtually try them on. The concept clearly draws inspiration from Ch
Red Fruit Short Drama Accused of Using AI to Steal Ordinary People’s Faces; No Official Response
The short video industry is currently facing a controversy involving AI-related infringement. Red Fruit Short Drama’s production "The Peach Hairpin" has been accused of using AI to "steal faces"—taking the likenesses of ordinary people without permis





Home






