Bing Health

Bing Health (previously Live Search Health) is a health-related search service as part of Microsoft's Bing search engine. It is a search engine specifically for health-related information through a variety of trusted and credible sources, including Medstory, Mayo Clinic, National Institutes of Health's MedlinePlus, as well as from Wikipedia.[1]

Bing Health
Screenshot
Bing Health displaying results of the search term "Common Cold"
Type of site
Search engine
OwnerMicrosoft
URLwww.bing.com
LaunchedJanuary 12, 2010 (2010-01-12)

History

Bing Health comes about as a result of the Microsoft's acquisition of Medstory in February 2007, gaining a foothold in the health search and health information market.[2][3] It was released for beta testing on October 8, 2007 as Live Search Health and served as the front-end to Microsoft HealthVault Search. Search results in Live Search Health were presented in a three-column layout with health-related articles from the trusted sources in the left, web search results in the middle, and sponsored results on the right. The topic dashboard also displays relevant topics, and allow users to add the search results to their scrapbook in Microsoft HealthVault Account. One particular feature for Live Search Health is that all health search queries and responses were encrypted to provide a measure of privacy and security when dealing with health issues.[4]

However, on June 3, 2009, the Live Search Health front-end became fully integrated into Bing search results, accessible only via the "Explorer pane" on the left when the contextual search engine detects a health-related search query entered.[5]

On January 10, 2010, Bing Health search results got an upgrade. Typing in a specific illness will now highlight important information such as related conditions, and common medications to reduce symptoms. In addition reference materials and documentation about the disease and its history can be shown.[6][7]

Bing Health is only available in the United States

gollark: Also, yes, this doesn't permit people to do anything so it's just "all rights reserved" with extra steps.
gollark: Since you could (if this is enforceable? I don't know) arbitrarily revoke permission to use it at any time.
gollark: I feel like that's obviously awful for anyone to use, if they care about following the license?
gollark: Maybe remove other .NET frameworks?
gollark: Well, on the extreme end, it would probably work to uninstall and reinstall Windows.

See also

References

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