cardiology-content-repurposer
Transform long-form cardiology content (YouTube transcripts, newsletters, PDFs, knowledge bases) into high-quality thought leadership content across multiple formats. Use when the user wants to repurpose medical/cardiology content into: (1) Short newspaper articles (Inshorts style), (2) Atomic essays, (3) Tweets, (4) Twitter threads, or (5) Medium-style blogs. Maintains authentic interventional cardiologist voice with clinical authority, uses 4A framework, targets specific patient archetypes, and leverages PubMed for evidence-based citations when needed.
When & Why to Use This Skill
This Claude skill empowers medical professionals to transform complex cardiology source material—including YouTube transcripts, newsletters, and PDFs—into high-quality, multi-format thought leadership content. By leveraging the 4A framework and PubMed integration, it ensures clinical authority and evidence-based accuracy across tweets, atomic essays, and long-form blogs, specifically optimized for patient education and professional branding.
Use Cases
- Converting a recorded cardiology webinar or YouTube transcript into a structured Twitter thread to increase social engagement and reach.
- Transforming dense medical newsletters or research papers into 'Inshorts' style brief articles for quick, accessible patient consumption.
- Generating evidence-backed Medium-style blogs from rough clinical notes or transcripts by automatically integrating verified PubMed citations.
- Creating a series of 'Atomic Essays' based on cardiology PDFs to establish consistent thought leadership and authority on professional platforms like LinkedIn.
| name | cardiology-content-repurposer |
|---|---|
| description | "Transform long-form cardiology content (YouTube transcripts, newsletters, PDFs, knowledge bases) into high-quality thought leadership content across multiple formats. Use when the user wants to repurpose medical/cardiology content into: (1) Short newspaper articles (Inshorts style), (2) Atomic essays, (3) Tweets, (4) Twitter threads, or (5) Medium-style blogs. Maintains authentic interventional cardiologist voice with clinical authority, uses 4A framework, targets specific patient archetypes, and leverages PubMed for evidence-based citations when needed." |
Cardiology Content Repurposer
Overview
Transform cardiology source material into engaging, evidence-based content that positions you as a thought leader while educating patients. Maintains clinical authority with conversational approachability.
When to Use This Skill
Use when the user provides:
- YouTube video transcripts about cardiology topics
- Medical newsletters or articles
- Knowledge from books/PDFs
- Any long-form medical content that needs repurposing for patient education
Core Workflow
Step 1: Analyze Source Material
Silently extract:
- Key points, themes, statistics, stories
- Clinical insights and evidence
- Multiple angles and subtopics
- Opportunities for different formats and archetypes
Step 2: Review Guidelines
Before writing, review:
references/voice-and-principles.mdfor authentic cardiologist voice, audience archetypes, and awareness levelsreferences/twitter-writing-guide.mdfor 4A framework, headline structures, and thread formattingreferences/content-formats.mdfor specific requirements of each output type
Step 3: Generate Content
Create content in this order (generate all applicable pieces from source):
Short Newspaper Articles (Inshorts style)
- Multiple pieces, <400 chars each
- See content-formats.md for specs
Atomic Essays
- Multiple pieces, 600-700 chars
- Use 4A framework for different angles
- See content-formats.md for specs
Tweets (Single)
- Multiple punchy tweets, 280 chars max
- Thought leadership, not random quotes
- See content-formats.md for specs
Twitter Threads
- Multiple threads, 4-12 tweets each
- Apply skimmability rhythms from twitter-writing-guide.md
- See content-formats.md for structure options
Blogs (Medium-style)
- 800-2000 words, in-depth
- Critical: If source is transcript/script without references, use PubMed to cite evidence
- See content-formats.md for citation requirements
Step 4: Apply Quality Standards
For every piece:
- Voice: Write as experienced interventional cardiologist with first-person authority
- No em-dashes: Avoid — unless absolutely necessary
- Natural language: Vary sentence structure, avoid AI patterns
- Audience fit: Only create content for archetypes where topic genuinely fits
- Awareness match: Only write for awareness levels that make sense for the topic
- No dumbing down: Audience isn't medical but isn't dumb
Step 5: PubMed Integration (for Blogs)
When source material is transcript/script without solid references:
- Identify factual claims needing backing
- Use
PubMed:search_articlesto find supporting evidence - Use
PubMed:get_article_metadatafor details - Cite naturally: [Study Name, Journal Year]
- Focus on RCTs, meta-analyses, major trials
Step 6: Present Output
List all generated content numbered by type:
SHORT NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
1. [Title]
[Body]
2. [Title]
[Body]
ATOMIC ESSAYS
1. [Title]
[Essay]
2. [Title]
[Essay]
TWEETS
1. [Tweet]
2. [Tweet]
TWITTER THREADS
Thread 1: [Theme]
• Tweet 1: [Hook]
• Tweet 2: [Content]
• Tweet 3: [Content]
• Tweet 4: [CTA]
BLOGS
Blog 1: [Title]
[Full blog with sections and citations]
Content Multiplication Strategy
Use modifiers to create variations:
- Tips, Stats, Steps, Lessons, Examples, Reasons, Mistakes, Questions, Stories, Benefits
Use 4A framework for angles:
- Actionable: "Here's how" (step-by-step)
- Analytical: "Show me numbers" (data-driven)
- Aspirational: "Make me believe" (stories)
- Anthropological: "Explain why" (psychology)
Critical Reminders
- Quality over quantity: Better to skip a format than force-fit content
- Thought leadership: Every piece should demonstrate expertise and add value
- Evidence-based: Use PubMed when making clinical claims in blogs
- Patient-centric: Translate medical jargon; speak directly to patients (you/your)
- Authentic voice: Sound like a real cardiologist, not AI
If No Source Provided
Politely ask: "Please provide the source material you'd like me to repurpose (transcript, newsletter, PDF, etc.)"
Iteration
If user requests changes, revise specifically and re-present. Only proceed on explicit 'proceed' or equivalent.