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Finding the way
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The Royal Hospital for Children and Young People in Edinburgh has a new wayfinding partnership.

March means spring for many, but before you grab those gardening gloves and prepare to get your hands dirty, maybe reconsider reaching for some Roundup. Bayer, which owns the pesticide, recently proposed a settlement for the numerous lawsuits it has received over allegations that it didn’t warn consumers about associated cancer risks. This spring is for the weeds.

In today’s edition:

Navigating to health

Microsoft Health’s new AI partnership

February’s AI roundup

—Jordyn Grzelewski, Caroline Catherman, Cassie McGrath

HOSPITALS

Exterior shot of The Royal Hospital for Children and Young People in Edinburgh

The Royal Hospital for Children and Young People

The introduction of wayfinding technology at a children’s hospital in Scotland started with a casual conversation among coworkers.

Olivia Swann, a pediatric infectious disease consultant at regional healthcare provider National Health Service (NHS) Lothian, recalled chatting with her colleagues at the 242-bed Royal Hospital for Children and Young People about how much time they spend giving directions to patients and their families.

“Children’s Hospital in Edinburgh is beautiful. It’s new. But it’s just not simple to find your way around,” Swann told us. In fact, an internal survey of 100 families indicated that 40% of respondents needed help finding their way around the facility.

“It wasn’t great for families when they were arriving at a time where it’s stressful and they’re anxious,” Swann added. “And if doctors and nurses are spending all their time guiding people around, then we can’t do the stuff that we need to do.”

GPS? Never heard of her.—JG

From The Crew

TECH

Microsoft logo with healthcare workers

Morning Brew Design, Photos: Adobe Stock, Microsoft

Microsoft is partnering with a new company in an effort to double down on its healthcare ambitions.

Professional software provider Wolters Kluwer Health’s clinical decision support tool, UpToDate, is integrating with Microsoft’s Dragon Copilot AI clinical assistant, Microsoft 365 Copilot, and Microsoft Teams, the two companies announced today.

UpToDate is an over 30-year-old subscription-based content library full of peer-reviewed clinical information and recommendations for 13,000+ healthcare topics across 25 specialties, all written exclusively for UpToDate by physicians. It’s used as a reference tool in more than 50,000 institutional sites worldwide.

The collaboration will allow Dragon to cite and link back to UpToDate’s content when guiding its more than 600,000 users, Hadas Bitran, partner general manager of health and life sciences AI services at Microsoft, told Healthcare Brew.

Here’s how clinicians can use UpToDate.—CC

AI

Healthcare Brew monthly series on AI Startups

Francis Scialabba

Welcome back to AI 411, a monthly roundup of AI announcements from across the healthcare industry.

In February, tech giant Nvidia released a report on the state of AI in healthcare that found 70% of 600+ respondents are “actively using AI.” Electronic health records (EHR) company Epic also had a couple announcements this month, including Group Health Cooperative of South Central Wisconsin becoming the first provider to use its new charting tool and smart hospital company Artisight integrating with Epic MyChart Bedside TV.

Here’s your breakdown of February 2026’s AI updates.

Ambience. The AI scribe company announced Feb. 17 that health system Houston Methodist has deployed its technology across the system’s 35,000-person staff.

Athenahealth. The EHR company shared Feb. 19 the next generation of its AI platform, athenaOne. Among its new capabilities are text and voice systems that allow patients to ask doctors questions and make appointments to manage workflows.

See the full list here.—CM

Together With PwC

VITAL SIGNS

A laptop tracking vital signs is placed on rolling medical equipment.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: 18. That’s how many states are taking steps to cut costs (like limiting enrollment) for their AIDS drug assistance programs as budgets tighten. (KFF)

Quote: “All I can say is that I’m beginning to regret having lived so long—because we’re going downhill.”—Stanley Plotkin, often called the “godfather of vaccines,” on falling vaccination rates and changing policies (Stat)

Read: Thought we were done hearing about ivermectin? Think again. It’s now making a comeback, despite lack of evidence, as a cancer treatment. (NPR)

The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew’s weekly news quiz has been compared to getting a company-wide shoutout from your boss. It’s that satisfying.

Ace the quiz

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Navigate the healthcare industry

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