Brief and important
OpenAI has launched ChatGPT Health — a separate module for medical queries that allows connecting electronic medical records and popular health-tracking apps (including Apple Health, Function, MyFitnessPal), as well as uploading test results and other files for more personalized answers.
What the service can do
The service responds to common requests: explain a cholesterol level, suggest a recovery plan after a break in training, formulate a list of questions for a doctor, or help make sense of medical insurance terms. Integration is supported with devices that track activity, sleep, and nutrition — meaning ChatGPT Health works as a "consultant" that takes your data into account.
Data security and transparency
Conversations, files, and connected sources are stored separately from other chats, all data is encrypted, and OpenAI states that these conversations are not used to train language models. Additionally, users can enable multi-factor authentication and set limits on topics and the style of responses.
"Conversations in ChatGPT Health are not used to train language models, and data is encrypted."
— OpenAI
Who worked on the product
The service was developed with the involvement of physicians: according to OpenAI, more than 260 medical professionals from different countries provided over 600,000 pieces of feedback on how responses are phrased. This is not a replacement for clinical diagnosis, but an important step toward more responsible use of AI in medicine.
Availability and limitations
The feature is currently being tested with a small group of users; it is planned to launch in the web version and on iOS in the coming weeks. Some capabilities, including connection to medical records, are currently available only in the United States — which means that for users in Ukraine the full set of features may arrive later.
Why this matters for Ukraine
For Ukraine this is not just about innovation, but about practical possibilities: remote support amid a shortage of specialists, more effective follow-up for chronic patients, and a tool for telemedicine during emergencies. At the same time, important questions of regulation and liability remain — who and how verifies advice, how to integrate local medical standards, and how to safeguard citizens' personal data.
What's next
The arrival of ChatGPT Health poses concrete tasks for Ukrainian medicine: assess integration options, cybersecurity requirements, and the regulatory framework. What matters next is not loud announcements, but quiet agreements between developers, doctors, and regulators so that the technology works for patient safety.
Now the ball is in the court of local medical authorities and technology partners: will we be able to use these tools for the benefit of citizens without compromising their data?