Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Anthropic’s Claude will soon help you make sense of your Apple Watch health data

The AI assistant will analyze your wearable metrics and offer clearer health insights.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Claude AI on an iPhone.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Anthropic just stepped into the healthcare AI space with the launch of Claude for Healthcare, a new suite of tools designed for providers, payers, and patients. Following in the footsteps of OpenAI’s ChatGPT Health, Claude for Healthcare aims to bring AI safely into medical contexts, helping users access and understand their health information more effectively.

As part of this push, Anthropic is introducing new integrations that let users connect their health data to Claude. In the US, subscribers on the Claude Pro and Max plans can give the AI assistant secure access to lab results and health records, and unlock features that make that data actionable.

Recommended Videos

Once connected, Claude can help users summarize their medical history, explain test results in simple language, and even prepare questions for doctor visits. It can also analyze health and fitness data from wearables like the Apple Watch, detecting patterns across metrics to give users a clearer picture of their overall health.

Anthropic has already released new HealthEX and Function connectors in beta, which let users provide Claude access to their medical data. The Apple Health and Android Health Connect integrations, which allow Claude to pull health and fitness metrics from phones and wearables, will roll out in beta this week through the Claude app for iOS and Android.

Anthropic promises complete privacy and user control

The company has emphasized that privacy and user control are central to these integrations. It notes that users must explicitly opt in to try these capabilities, can control exactly what information they share, and can disconnect or edit Claude’s permissions at any time. Anthropic also says that user health data will not be used to train its AI models.

To ensure users approach its insights responsibly, Claude will include contextual disclaimers, acknowledge areas of uncertainty, and direct users to healthcare professionals for personalized guidance.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
AI chatbots can often feed into your delusions. Researchers say you should look for three signs
Experts warn that chatbot design choices can reinforce unhealthy beliefs in vulnerable users.
ChatGPT on a smartphone

Artificial intelligence chatbots have become incredibly good at sounding human. But a new review paper by psychiatrist Marc Augustin and fellow researchers Thomas A. Pollak and Helen Morrin, published in NPP—Digital Psychiatry and Neuroscience, argues that existing AI research points to an overlooked psychological risk. The paper, highlighted by The Wall Street Journal, reviews previous studies and proposes a framework explaining how three common chatbot behaviors can combine to reinforce delusional thinking in vulnerable users, creating what the authors call an "amplification spiral."

Researchers say these are the three warning signs

Read more
Lost access to your crypto wallet? Don’t Google your way out of it
Security researchers warn that fake recovery tools are becoming the latest trap for crypto owners.
Bitcoin crypto wallet featured

Forgetting the recovery phrase to a crypto wallet can be stressful enough. Unfortunately, that's exactly the moment scammers are waiting for. A new warning highlights a growing scam in which cybercriminals disguise malware as cryptocurrency recovery software, tricking desperate users into handing over far more than just access to their wallets.

The fake recovery tool that's actually malware

Read more
Chinese AI lab says it can match Anthropic’s all-poweful Claude Mythos at sniffing security bugs
Security researchers say Z.ai's latest model can rival Anthropic's Mythos in one critical area.
China Z.Ai GLM-5.2 Featured Banner

For the past few weeks, Anthropic's Mythos has been viewed as the gold standard for AI-powered cybersecurity. That lead may already be shrinking. According to a new report from The Wall Street Journal, security researchers say Chinese AI startup Z.ai's GLM-5.2 can now match Mythos when it comes to finding software security vulnerabilities, even if it still trails Anthropic and OpenAI in broader reasoning tasks.

GLM-5.2 is closing the gap in one very important area

Read more