I'm a Registered Nurse and former memory-care Wellness Director. I write and review health content that's clinically accurate, plain-English, and ready to publish under a real "medically reviewed by RN" byline.
Health and wellness brands hire me when the content has to be both accurate enough for a clinician and clear enough for a worried patient.
I review your existing articles for clinical accuracy, outdated guidance, and unsafe wording — returned with tracked changes and a note on every edit.
Named "reviewed by RN" bylineArticles, blogs, and patient-education pieces written from clinical experience — not scraped from the first page of Google.
SEO-awareDementia caregiving, assisted living, wound and chronic-care guidance — the programs I ran for a living, translated for families.
Niche expertiseFAQs, caregiver guides, and discharge-style explainers that patients actually finish and understand.
Plain-languageMedical-record review and plain-English summaries for injury and malpractice cases — chronologies, merit notes, and chart breakdowns.
For law firmsNCLEX prep and continuing-education content for nursing students and early-career clinicians.
Exam-alignedNot a writer who researched healthcare — a clinician who writes.
Led resident wellness operations, care-plan oversight, staff training, and family communication for a 58-resident memory-care community.
Managed wound assessment, documentation, and treatment protocols across a skilled-nursing census.
Supervised subacute rehab and long-term/dementia units, clinical documentation, and interdisciplinary coordination.
Med/Surg, Telemetry, and ED across NYC hospitals; acute-rehab supervision. Where the clinical instincts were built.
A real before/after from a wellness article review — accuracy and safety, not just polish.
"If you have a pressure sore, just keep it covered and it will heal on its own in a few days. Use any cream you have at home."
Flags: false healing timeline, no offloading/staging guidance, unsafe "any cream" advice, no escalation trigger.
"Early pressure injuries need pressure relief first — reposition and keep weight off the area. Healing time varies with stage and health, and signs like spreading redness, odor, or drainage mean it's time to call a clinician."
Accurate, safe, still plain-language. Reviewer note attached to each change.
Tell me your topic and audience. I'll send a short sample edit or outline before you commit to anything.
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