Here are 11 healthcare moves Amazon has made since June:
This article was updated Nov. 18 and will continue to be updated with the latest news.
- In November, Amazon launched new telehealth options for Prime members that display the prices upfront. The service offers Prime members a monthly rate or per-use cost for a telehealth visit (via video or messaging), treatment plan and medication delivery.
- Amazon One Medical rolled out AI tools for its EHR system, 1Life, aimed at easing healthcare providers’ administrative burdens.
- Cleveland Clinic and Amazon’s One Medical teamed up to bring the hybrid primary care company to Northeast Ohio.
- Amazon Pharmacy will expand its presence by launching pharmacies in 20 additional cities across the U.S. in 2025.
- Amazon’s One Medical expanded its collaboration with Dallas-based Baylor Scott & White Health to open its fifth office in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, in Plano.
- Columbia, S.C.-based Prisma Health became the third health system in the country to open a retail market featuring Amazon’s “just-walk-out” technology.
- Providence, R.I.-based Care New England was selected to participate in Amazon Web Services’ Health Equity Initiative, a $60 million program aimed at supporting organizations developing solutions to advance health equity.
- GE HealthCare and Amazon Web Services partnered to develop advanced generative artificial intelligence models and tools aimed at efficiently analyzing complex medical data.
- Amazon Clinic, Amazon’s virtual care platform, rebranded to Amazon One Medical Pay-per-visit.
- Amazon Web Services committed to giving $3 million to three healthcare organizations in an effort to advance pediatric and children’s healthcare. Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C.; Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio; and the Children’s Brain Tumor Network at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia will each receive $1 million.
- In June, Amazon opened its first pharmacy in California.