Ready-made formats
How-to, listicle, clinical explainer, recipe, workout plan
Choose a format that matches intent and publishing goals
Legacy SEO Tool
Generate publishable blog drafts with SEO-structured outlines, citation-friendly paragraphs, tone controls for clinical or consumer audiences, GEO-localization, and built-in editorial guardrails for medical-adjacent content.
Ready-made formats
How-to, listicle, clinical explainer, recipe, workout plan
Choose a format that matches intent and publishing goals
Evidence sources
Journal abstracts, government guidelines, nutrition databases
Prompts indicate source types for editorial verification
Localization
Metric/imperial conversion, regional food and measurement notes
Adapt content to country-specific readers and search intent
Purpose
Health and wellness content must satisfy readers, search engines, and clinical editors. This generator focuses on search intent and on-page structure while prompting for source types and verification notes so teams can produce content that is both discoverable and review-ready.
Practical prompts
Use these prompt patterns to produce focused outputs. Replace placeholders like {primary_keyword}, {topic}, {country_code}, and {audience_segment} with your article variables before running the generator.
Create a search-optimized outline for a 1,200-word blog post.
Produce a short, citation-aware section suitable for editorial review.
Adjust measurements and regional recommendations.
Generate JSON-LD and SEO metadata for immediate publishing.
Citation guidance
Prompts encourage surfacing reputable source types for editorial verification. Use the generator to flag source types (e.g., journal article, government guideline, nutrition database) and to produce a short verification trace that editors can follow when validating claims.
Regional SEO
Built-in localization prompts convert units, surface region-appropriate food examples, and suggest local search terms. This helps the article align to local intent and regional SERP patterns.
Compliance-friendly
For medical-adjacent topics, the generator suggests editorial guardrails: explicit disclaimers, clinician review steps, and recommended language to avoid unsupported claims. These are prompts that integrate into your editorial checklist.
What you get
Each run can produce: an SEO outline, H1/H2 suggestions, 3–10 headline options, a 250–400 word evidence-aware section with citation types, a localized version, and JSON-LD metadata. Use these pieces as a draft for editorial refinement.
The generator is evidence-aware: prompts explicitly request citation types (for example, 'journal article' or 'government guideline') and a short verification note for editors. It does not replace expert review — instead it produces a traceable list of recommended source types and search terms to support editorial validation.
Include a clear patient-facing disclaimer when content crosses into diagnosis or treatment, add an author role line (e.g., 'Written by a registered dietitian' or 'Reviewed by a clinician'), and require clinician sign-off for prescriptive statements. Use the built-in prompt that appends a recommended disclaimer and reviewer checklist.
Run the localization prompt with the target country_code to convert units, swap regional food examples, and surface local search terms. Add city-level keywords in headings and assign internal links to local service pages to reinforce GEO relevance.
Patient education benefits from clinical explainers, myth-busting sections, and step-by-step how-to guides with clear safety notes. Marketing pieces work well as listicles, recipes, and short workout plans with CTAs. Use the format that matches user intent and keep clinical detail in clearly labeled sections.
Generated content should be reviewed before publishing. For medical-adjacent topics, require an expert review for accuracy, relevant source verification, and regulatory compliance. The generator is intended to accelerate drafting and research, not to replace domain expertise.
Use the 'SEO headline + meta' and 'Schema + metadata pack' prompt clusters. Request meta descriptions between 120–155 characters containing the primary keyword early, and ask for JSON-LD with placeholders for author, datePublished, and mainEntityOfPage to drop into your CMS.
Use the 'Tone variants' prompt to produce three versions—clinical, friendly coach, and layperson. Keep clinical sections concise and isolate technical language in expandable blocks so the main article remains readable while preserving accuracy for interested readers.
Have the generator append a verification section with recommended citation types, short citation snippets (author, year, title), and search queries to locate original sources. Store that verification trace in your CMS or editorial tracker to document review and compliance steps.