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How do you take one complex medical concept and make it clear, accurate, and actionable for both clinicians and patients, without losing credibility?
If you’re a CME writer, you know the challenge of translating science into education that actually sticks. But as more CME projects tether clinician education with patient-facing components, the real test is flexing your craft to serve two very different audiences at once. Get this right, and you not only improve learning, you expand your professional scope and impact.
In this episode, you’ll discover:
🎧 Tune in now and learn how to expand your CME writing craft into dual-audience education with one portable tool you can start using today.
Resources
Resources to support plain language, readability, and accessibility.
Episodes Mentioned
Practice: Explain one complex idea in three sentences, twice—once for patients, once for clinicians.
Take one complex concept: SGLT2 inhibitors reduce heart failure hospitalizations.
For patients:
For clinicians:
Here’s why this exercise matters: most adults in the U.S. read at about an 8th grade level, and nearly 1 in 5 at or below 5th grade. When we condense a complex medical concept into three short sentences—plain, clear, active—we’re not “dumbing down.” We’re writing accessibly, building trust, and giving patients a fair chance to participate in their care.
This 3-sentence rule is your portable tool for making health literacy visible in practice. And the bonus? It sharpens your clinician writing too—forcing clarity, precision, and focus on what truly matters.
Mentioned in this episode:
Write Medicine Mentor
Write Medicine Mentor is your private companion podcast designed exclusively for medical writers who want deeper support as they grow in continuing medical education (CME). Each month, you'll receive exclusive content from me to support your business and income growth as well as templates/checklists/swipe files you can use and apply to client projects.
Alliance Almanac
By Alexandra Howson PhD4.8
2323 ratings
How do you take one complex medical concept and make it clear, accurate, and actionable for both clinicians and patients, without losing credibility?
If you’re a CME writer, you know the challenge of translating science into education that actually sticks. But as more CME projects tether clinician education with patient-facing components, the real test is flexing your craft to serve two very different audiences at once. Get this right, and you not only improve learning, you expand your professional scope and impact.
In this episode, you’ll discover:
🎧 Tune in now and learn how to expand your CME writing craft into dual-audience education with one portable tool you can start using today.
Resources
Resources to support plain language, readability, and accessibility.
Episodes Mentioned
Practice: Explain one complex idea in three sentences, twice—once for patients, once for clinicians.
Take one complex concept: SGLT2 inhibitors reduce heart failure hospitalizations.
For patients:
For clinicians:
Here’s why this exercise matters: most adults in the U.S. read at about an 8th grade level, and nearly 1 in 5 at or below 5th grade. When we condense a complex medical concept into three short sentences—plain, clear, active—we’re not “dumbing down.” We’re writing accessibly, building trust, and giving patients a fair chance to participate in their care.
This 3-sentence rule is your portable tool for making health literacy visible in practice. And the bonus? It sharpens your clinician writing too—forcing clarity, precision, and focus on what truly matters.
Mentioned in this episode:
Write Medicine Mentor
Write Medicine Mentor is your private companion podcast designed exclusively for medical writers who want deeper support as they grow in continuing medical education (CME). Each month, you'll receive exclusive content from me to support your business and income growth as well as templates/checklists/swipe files you can use and apply to client projects.
Alliance Almanac

3,337 Listeners

112,433 Listeners