Microsoft and the nonprofit academic medical centre Mayo Clinic have announced a joint effort to develop a new artificial intelligence model built exclusively for the healthcare sector. The initiative is aimed at supporting patients, clinicians and healthcare consumers by drawing on Mayo Clinic’s deep medical expertise and Microsoft’s AI and cloud engineering capabilities.
According to the two organisations, the healthcare AI model will integrate Mayo Clinic’s anonymised health data, medical knowledge base and patient care experience with Microsoft’s technology infrastructure. Once operational at scale, the model is expected to analyse diverse types of clinical information to support tasks such as earlier diagnosis and more personalised treatment planning.
The model is currently being deployed within Mayo Clinic’s own clinical environment, where it will be tested and refined through real-world application. The organisations have not disclosed how widely the model is being used at this stage, which specific clinical areas are involved, or when it might be made available to other healthcare providers beyond Mayo Clinic.
Ownership of the model will rest with Mayo Clinic, while Microsoft intends to make it accessible to developers and healthcare companies through Azure Foundry APIs software tools that allow external parties to connect the model directly into their own applications and services.
Gianrico Farrugia, M.D., president and CEO of Mayo Clinic, commented on the development: “We have long believed AI can help transform healthcare. Seven years ago, we launched Mayo Clinic Platform to move healthcare from a pipeline to a platform model through a safe, trusted, patient-centric de-identified data foundation designed to accelerate innovation, breakthroughs, and cures. Now, by combining our clinical expertise and data foundation with Microsoft’s engineering and AI capabilities, we are once again building something new in healthcare and bringing more of Mayo Clinic to more patients.”
Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of Microsoft AI, also spoke on the collaboration: “This is the best collaboration imaginable to help us accelerate towards that future. Mayo has unparalleled clinical expertise, de-identified clinical health data and longitudinal medical insights, and we’re thrilled to partner with their world-class physicians to build a state-of-the-art foundation model for healthcare.”
Healthcare has emerged as one of the most active frontiers for advanced artificial intelligence development, though it also presents considerable challenges. Medical AI systems must be capable of handling complex clinical data, accommodating individual patient health histories, and satisfying the most rigorous standards for safety, privacy and validation.
Under the European Union’s AI Act, AI-based software developed for medical purposes is classified as high-risk. This classification requires that such systems meet a defined set of safeguards, including risk-mitigation mechanisms, high-quality training datasets, clear communication to users, and ongoing human oversight, as outlined by the European Commission.
The growing use of AI in healthcare is reflected in broader public behaviour as well. A 2025 survey of 2,000 patients in the United Kingdom, conducted by healthcare startup Semble, found that one in four representing 24% of respondents were turning to AI tools and social media platforms such as ChatGPT and Instagram for health-related guidance. Separately, in Denmark, visits to the public health information website Patienthåndbogen dropped by 31% between January and November 2025 following the launch of Google’s AI Overview, according to the country’s national news agency Ritzau.
Healthcare AI model development is gaining momentum because the technology holds the potential to process large volumes of medical information rapidly, assist clinicians in diagnostics and complex clinical decisions, and significantly reduce the administrative burden on healthcare staff. Microsoft has described “frontier medical intelligence” as being close to realisation, positioning this partnership as a step in that direction.
Nevertheless, the application of artificial intelligence in medicine continues to raise legitimate concerns around accuracy, potential bias, data privacy and accountability. These concerns are particularly prominent given the sensitive nature of health data and the direct impact that clinical decisions can have on patient outcomes. The two organisations have not provided a detailed timeline for when the healthcare AI model will be made available to healthcare providers outside of Mayo Clinic’s own clinical setting.


















