Harvard Medical School has licensed its consumer health content to Microsoft, enabling Copilot to deliver medically grounded answers on diseases, wellness, and preventive care part of Microsoft’s effort to strengthen Copilot’s health AI capabilities.
Glimpse:
Microsoft is integrating content from Harvard Health Publishing into its Copilot AI assistant via a licensing agreement. This collaboration gives Copilot access to high-quality, medically reviewed health and wellness information that can improve the reliability and trustworthiness of its health-related responses. The deal is also part of Microsoft’s broader strategy to reduce dependence on external AI providers like OpenAI.
Harvard Medical School has entered into a licensing agreement with Microsoft, allowing the tech giant to use health content from Harvard Health Publishing in its AI assistant, Copilot.
The content encompasses disease overviews, wellness advice, and other medically vetted materials tailored for general audiences.
The move is part of Microsoft’s strategy to bolster Copilot’s credibility in health queries while diversifying its AI model sources beyond reliance on OpenAI.
According to sources, Microsoft plans to pay Harvard a licensing fee in exchange for access to this content.
Dominic King, Vice President of Health at Microsoft AI, explained that the purpose of the partnership is to help Copilot “provide answers that mirror what a user might hear from a medical professional,” emphasizing the need for authoritative and trustworthy health information.
Analysts view this as a calculated move: by infusing Copilot with Harvard’s curated medical knowledge, Microsoft strengthens Copilot’s positioning in health use cases areas where users place high value on accuracy and sources. At the same time, it helps Microsoft step toward building more of its own AI infrastructure and reduce strategic dependency on external AI providers.
However, challenges remain: integrating licensed content so that responses are contextually relevant, protecting against hallucinations, ensuring source transparency, and keeping updates and medical standards current will be vital to the success of health-enabled Copilot.
“Making sure people have access to credible, trustworthy health information that is tailored to their language and literacy is essential. Part of that is sourcing material from the right places.”
By
HB Team

