Source: Amazon
Amazon brings Health AI to Amazon.com and the Amazon app, expanding personalized health support beyond One Medical and into its retail core.
Amazon is moving Health AI, its agentic health assistant, out of the clinic app and into its retail core, expanding the service to Amazon.com and the Amazon app. With the launch, Amazon is pitching its platform as more than just a place to shop, positioning it as a new entry point for AI-powered healthcare.
The company describes the service as a more personalized health assistant that can sit closer to the rest of its ecosystem, bringing care-related help into a space millions already use. That places care-related assistance in a scalable setting, where Amazon can expose the service to a much larger pool of users.
Inside the chat, the tool goes beyond basic health Q&A. It breaks down lab results, diagnoses, and medical records in plain language, answers symptom and medication questions in context, and helps users map out next steps.
That practical streak runs through the rest of the experience. The tool can connect users to a One Medical provider by message, video, or in person, send prescription renewal requests that can be filled through Amazon Pharmacy or another pharmacy, and surface relevant health products when asked.
In other words, Amazon’s new Health AI is meant to guide users from a health question to follow-through.
The personalization only kicks in if users choose it. Health AI can handle general health questions on its own, but the more tailored version begins when a user gives permission for the assistant to access medical history, medications, lab results, and clinical notes through the Health Information Exchange, with relevant health-related Amazon purchases such as vitamins or blood pressure monitors.
That added context is what turns a generic reply into something more specific to the person asking. Amazon’s example is an asthma patient who develops a cough during flu season: The tool can factor in that diagnosis, current medications, and prior flare-ups, and then ask follow-up questions to help distinguish a routine issue from something more serious.
Health AI also gives the company a new way to pull Prime, One Medical, and pharmacy services into a single offer.
Eligible US Prime members get up to five free direct-message care consultations with a One Medical provider for more than 30 common conditions, including cold and flu, allergies, acid reflux, pink eye, UTIs, hair loss, and anti-aging skin care.
Add Amazon Pharmacy to that mix, and the assistant becomes part of a broader health bundle.
Trust is central as the company asks users to hand over sensitive health information.
Health AI runs in a HIPAA-compliant environment with encryption and strict access controls, and the protected health information from One Medical and Amazon Pharmacy is not used to market general merchandise or for Amazon Ads. Amazon also says it does not sell customers’ personal data.
The company is also emphasizing the safety systems around the service.
It says Health AI was evaluated across synthetic conversations covering clinical safety, emergency response, and compliance, and that it routes users to a human provider whenever it is uncertain about a clinical recommendation. The system runs on Amazon Bedrock and uses multiple agents, including auditor and sentinel agents, with escalation paths into human providers for clinical review.
Amazon is also extending the service across more of the care journey, including specialty care through partner health systems such as Rush and the Cleveland Clinic.
Amazon is reducing headcount in robotics while continuing to treat automation as a core long-term investment.
Liz Ticong is a staff writer for eWeek and TechRepublic focused on AI, cybersecurity, enterprise software, and data. She has more than 10 years of editorial experience as a technology industry writer, combining reporting, product research, and hands-on software testing in her coverage. Her work has been published on Datamation, Enterprise Networking Planet, and TechnologyAdvice.com. She writes technology news, software reviews, product comparisons, and buyer’s guides for business and IT readers.