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Apple reportedly scales back plans for AI-powered health coach

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Bloomberg reports that Apple has recently scaled back its plans for the Project Mulberry initiative following a leadership shakeup at the company’s health organization. Here are the details.

Some Project Mulberry-related initiatives might still be released

Last year, Bloomberg reported that Apple was looking into Project Mulberry, an initiative that would bring an AI-powered health coach to a revamped Health app.

According to the original report, this AI agent was being trained on data from Apple-hired physicians, and would rely on sleep experts, nutritionists, physical therapists, mental health experts, and cardiologists to create educational video content for the Health app.

Apple had reportedly built a studio in Oakland, California, to produce this content, which Bloomberg notes “will be repurposed and introduced as early as this year.”

From my 9to5Mac’s coverage of Project Mulberry:

These videos will play to help explain concerning health trends to users, and will be recorded in a new facility in Oakland, California, according to Gurman. Apple also wants to find a ‘major doctor personality’ to serve as a ‘host’ for the new service. Some inside of Apple are calling this service ‘Health+.’

Since then, the project (which was reportedly slated to be introduced alongside iOS 26) saw multiple timeline shifts, as Apple’s own health and AI divisions underwent multiple organizational changes.

On the health side, longtime COO Jeff Williams retired, and oversight of the health and fitness teams was shifted to services chief Eddy Cue.

Meanwhile, on the AI side, Apple’s senior vice president of Machine Learning and AI Strategy, John Giannandrea, announced he will step down and retire in spring 2026, with much of his organization being folded into the broader software engineering group overseen by Craig Federighi.

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