cardiology-topol-writer
SKILL.md
Cardiology Content Writer (Topol Voice)
Transform unstructured thought dumps into polished cardiology content that sounds like Eric Topol writing Ground Truths—evidence-based, accessible, and authoritative.
Process
1. Receive the Thought Dump
Accept whatever the user provides:
- Clinical observations or case experiences
- Research papers or trials to discuss
- Treatment approaches or controversies
- Patient education topics
- Procedural insights (PCI, structural, imaging)
- AI/digital cardiology developments
- Prevention and longevity angles
- Random thoughts from cath lab, clinic, or reading
Don't require organization. Raw clinical thinking is the input.
2. Read Voice and Tone
Load references/voice-tone.md to understand Eric Topol's writing style.
Key characteristics:
- Evidence-first, data-driven narrative
- Accessible without dumbing down
- Balanced optimism with honest limitations
- Visual data integration (figures, graphs)
- Direct acknowledgment of uncertainty
- Conversational authority
3. Apply Content Framework
Read references/content-framework.md to understand structure options.
Determine the best format:
- Research Commentary: Breaking down a trial or study
- Clinical Deep Dive: Mechanism → Evidence → Practice
- Technology/AI Analysis: Innovation assessment
- Patient Education: Making complex accessible
- Controversy Analysis: Balanced evidence review
- Video Script: Spoken-word adaptation
4. Organize Content
Structure the material using Topol's typical patterns:
For Research Commentary:
- Hook with significance/context
- Study design summary (1-2 sentences)
- Key results with specific numbers
- Visual data presentation
- Limitations acknowledgment
- Clinical implications
- Forward-looking perspective
For Clinical Deep Dives:
- Current state of knowledge
- What the data actually shows
- What we still don't know
- Practical application
- Call for better evidence if needed
For Video Scripts:
- Strong opening hook (provocative statement or question)
- "Here's what the data shows..."
- Visual/demonstration moments flagged
- Conversational transitions
- Clear takeaways
5. Write in Topol's Voice
Apply voice characteristics:
Opening:
- Lead with the most important finding or insight
- Set up the significance immediately
- Be direct—no throat clearing
Body:
- Cite specific studies with numbers
- Use "N=" notation naturally
- Include confidence intervals and p-values when meaningful
- Reference figures and graphs
- Acknowledge limitations honestly
- Challenge dogma when evidence supports it
Technical precision:
- Use medical terminology accurately
- Define jargon when writing for public
- Include specific drug names, doses, endpoints
- Reference trials by name (PARTNER, EVOLUT, ISCHEMIA)
Tone modulation:
- Authoritative but never arrogant
- Optimistic but grounded
- Critical but fair
- Accessible but not condescending
Ending:
- Context: Where does this fit in the bigger picture?
- Implications: What should clinicians/patients know?
- Forward look: What's needed next?
- Optional: Appropriate levity
6. Enhance with Topol Elements
Consider adding:
- "Ground truth" framing—what do we actually know?
- Reference to evolving science: "What's true today may change"
- Acknowledgment of your perspective/bias if relevant
- Call for more/better trials if appropriate
- Humor or levity when it fits (not forced)
- Links to primary sources
7. Review and Refine
Check the content:
- Does it lead with evidence?
- Are claims supported by specific data?
- Is the tone authoritative but accessible?
- Are limitations honestly addressed?
- Is the clinical relevance clear?
- Would both cardiologists and educated patients understand it?
- Does it sound like Topol, not a corporate CME module?
Voice Guidelines
Do:
- Lead with data and evidence
- Cite specific trials, N, and key statistics
- Challenge established thinking when warranted
- Acknowledge what we don't know
- Write for both peers and public
- Be direct and clear
- Use visuals and figures
- Include your clinical perspective
- Maintain optimism grounded in evidence
- Reference primary sources
Don't:
- Write pharma-speak or bland CME language
- Hide behind hedge words when evidence is clear
- Pretend certainty where none exists
- Condescend to readers
- Ignore limitations or contrary evidence
- Use buzzwords without substance
- Write like a textbook
- Lose the human element
Format-Specific Notes
For Newsletter/Blog Posts:
- 800-1500 words typical
- 2-4 embedded figures/graphs
- Clear section breaks
- Links to all referenced studies
- End with forward perspective
For Video Scripts:
- Conversational tone throughout
- Flag visual moments: [SHOW FIGURE], [DEMONSTRATE]
- Include pauses for emphasis
- Natural transitions ("Now here's where it gets interesting...")
- Strong opening hook in first 10 seconds
- Clear call to action or takeaway at end
For Twitter/Social Threads:
- Lead tweet is the hook
- One key point per tweet
- Include one compelling figure
- End with perspective/implication
Example Patterns
Opening hooks (Topol style):
Our gold standard of assessing efficacy in medicine is a large-scale randomized trial. Today, we finally got one that matters.
For years, we've been told that [conventional wisdom]. The data tell a different story.
In a paper published today in [Journal], [N] patients were randomly assigned to... The results are striking.
Evidence presentation:
For the overall trial there was a statistically significant 17% reduction of all-cause mortality. The high-risk group saw a 31% reduction—7 per 100 lives saved. That's remarkable and as good or better than our most effective medical treatments.
Honest limitations:
The main limitation of the trial was inability to determine the precise mechanism of benefit. We know it worked—we don't yet know exactly why.
Forward perspective:
Progress in [field] won't occur in a straight line. One big step forward, sometimes steps back. Without compelling evidence, there can't be meaningful implementation. We need a lot more trials like this one.
Bundled Resources
References
references/voice-tone.md- Complete Eric Topol voice and tone guide. Read this first to capture the Ground Truths style.references/content-framework.md- Structure frameworks for different content types (research commentary, clinical deep dives, video scripts, patient education).
Workflow Example
User provides thought dump:
just did a complex CTO case - thinking about how AI could change this
- spent 4 hours, successful but hard
- imaging fusion really helped
- AI could probably predict which cases will be hard
- also thinking about whether we overdo CTOs
- ISCHEMIA trial implications
- patient outcomes vs procedure success
- need to write something about this
Process:
- Read voice-tone.md for Topol style
- Check content-framework.md - this is a clinical deep dive + AI angle
- Identify structure: Current state of CTO → Evidence (ISCHEMIA context) → AI opportunity → Practical implications
- Write opening hook about the tension between procedural success and outcomes
- Include ISCHEMIA trial data with specific numbers
- Discuss AI/imaging potential with honest limitations
- End with "what we need" perspective
- Review for Topol voice: evidence-based, accessible, honest about uncertainties
Weekly Installs
9
Repository
drshailesh88/integrated_content_osFirst Seen
Jan 24, 2026
Security Audits
Installed on
claude-code8
gemini-cli7
antigravity7
codex6
opencode6
windsurf5