Perplexity Health
Ask your health data: wearables + EHRs unified in one AI layer
The Panel's Take
Perplexity Health connects Apple Health, Fitbit, Ultrahuman, and Withings wearables with electronic health records from 1.7 million+ US care providers into a single AI query interface. Users can ask natural-language questions about their health — trends, anomalies, pre-appointment prep — and get answers grounded in their own longitudinal data. The product generates pre-appointment summaries you can share with your doctor, personalized nutrition plans based on biomarker history, and trend analysis across sleep, activity, and clinical records. Health data is end-to-end encrypted, not used for model training, and not sold to third parties. It's available to Perplexity Pro and Max subscribers in the United States. This is the first mainstream AI assistant to unify wearable data and clinical records at scale, leapfrogging Apple Intelligence's narrow health features and Google's Health Connect API without shipping new hardware. The key question is whether non-technical users will trust Perplexity with their most sensitive personal data.
Individual Reviews
Developer Perspective
Connecting 1.7M EHR providers via FHIR/API without building any hardware is exactly the right infrastructure play. If they open a developer API layer on top of this health data graph, every health app will want to plug in. The data moat here could be enormous.
Reality Check
Perplexity has had data sourcing controversy before. Trusting them with your EHR and biometric data is a much higher-stakes bet than trusting them with web search. One breach, one data-sharing revelation, and the regulatory blowback would be severe — HIPAA exposure is no joke.
Big Picture
Longitudinal personal health AI is the killer app that makes everyone a power user of their own data. When you can ask 'why was my HRV tanking in February?' and get a real answer, health AI stops being aspirational and starts being essential. Perplexity just claimed the territory.
Content & Design
Generating pre-appointment summaries I can actually share with my doctor is the kind of practical health feature I've wanted for years. The UX of 'ask a question, get your data back in plain language' is dramatically better than digging through the Health app graphs.
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