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Write for Us: Digital Healthcare – Share Your Health Tech Knowledge

Hey, glad you found this

So you ended up on this page. That’s awesome.

Look, here’s what’s actually going on. We run Dion Health Web because the digital healthcare space is moving crazy fast, and most people are getting left behind trying to understand it.[attached_file:1] Everyone’s talking about health apps, telehealth, wearables, and digital solutions, but very few people actually explain how this stuff works in real life or why it matters for everyday people.

Our readers? They’re curious about how digital healthcare is changing how we care for ourselves. They want to understand which health tech tools actually help and which are just hype. They want to know how to use digital healthcare responsibly without getting overwhelmed by options. They’re looking for honest advice from people who actually understand this space.

If you know digital healthcare and have worked with health tech, and you can explain it in a real, practical way that doesn’t sound like a robot wrote it, we want you to write here. Whether you’re a healthcare professional who uses digital tools, a health tech developer, someone who studies digital healthcare trends, or you’ve just spent years learning how this stuff works in practice, there’s definitely space for you.

This isn’t about selling health apps or promoting products. It’s about helping people understand and benefit from digital healthcare.


Who we’re looking for

Real talk? We’re selective, but not in a gatekeeping way. We need people who actually know their stuff.

If you fit any of these, we’d love to hear from you:

  • Healthcare professionals using digital tools – Doctors, nurses, therapists who work with digital healthcare daily

  • Health tech developers or product managers – You build digital healthcare solutions

  • Digital healthcare consultants or strategists – You help organizations implement digital healthcare

  • Telemedicine specialists – You understand remote care and virtual patient management

  • Health data experts or privacy professionals – You know the digital healthcare ecosystem

  • Researchers studying digital healthcare trends – You understand where this is heading

  • People who’ve used digital healthcare tools successfully – Real users with honest experiences

  • Anyone seriously studying digital healthcare – And can back it up with real knowledge, not just hype

You don’t need a fancy certification (though it helps). Some of the best digital healthcare expertise comes from people who’ve spent years using and testing these tools in real-world settings. What matters is that you genuinely know this stuff. Like, really know it. We can tell when someone’s just repeating marketing claims, and so can our readers.


Topics we’re genuinely hungry for

Look, I could list forever, but here’s what would actually resonate with Dion Health Web readers:[attached_file:1]

  • Digital healthcare for preventive health – How tech helps stop problems before they start

  • Telemedicine basics and how it actually works – Simple guide for people new to remote care

  • Health apps that are actually useful – Not just hype, real practical tools

  • Wearable devices and digital health tracking – What they can tell you and what they can’t

  • Digital healthcare for disease management – Managing chronic conditions with tech

  • Privacy and security in digital healthcare – What you actually need to know

  • How digital healthcare is changing doctor visits – The real impact on patient care

  • Exercise tracking and fitness apps – Connecting digital healthcare to fitness goals

  • Mental health apps and digital mental healthcare – Real solutions vs just pretty interfaces

  • Healthcare technology for older adults – Making digital healthcare accessible to everyone

  • Cost savings with digital healthcare – Why it matters for regular people

  • Digital healthcare during emergencies – When remote care actually saves lives

  • Connecting different digital healthcare tools – Making them work together

  • Future of digital healthcare – What’s actually coming next vs hype

  • Real stories of digital healthcare transformation – How it changed someone’s health for real

If you have an angle that helps people understand or benefit from digital healthcare, pitch it. We’re not going to be difficult about it.


What we actually need from your article

Alright, so here’s what makes an article work for Dion Health Web:

Length: Aim for somewhere around 1,500 to 2,500 words. Shorter guides or how-tos? 1,000–1,200 is totally fine. Just don’t pad it with garbage to hit a number. That’s annoying.

Talk like a real person: Write like you’re explaining digital healthcare to a friend. Short sentences. Normal paragraphs. No healthcare industry jargon. If you use a technical term, explain what it actually means. Not everyone’s a health tech expert.

Keep it original: Your article has to be actually yours. Avoid copying from health tech websites, rewriting other blogs, or stealing from marketing materials. We want what’s in your brain. Your perspective. Your real experience.

Back your claims up: If you’re saying something about how digital healthcare works or matters, show why. Use real examples, statistics, and your own experience. Just be honest about how you know what you know. Our readers appreciate transparency.

Make it readable: Use headings so readers can skim. Start with something that hooks them. End with actual action steps they can take. Don’t bury the good stuff in the middle.

Keywords should feel natural: Use “digital healthcare” in your intro, in a heading or two, and somewhere near the end. But don’t force it. If it feels weird, it IS weird.

Link to our other content: When appropriate, link to other Dion Health Web posts. Talking about health technology? Consider referencing “How Health Technology Is Actually Changing Your Life Right Now.” Discussing preventive health? Link to the Preventive Health section. Talking about exercise? Connect to Exercise Plans. Helps readers find more and helps us too.

Give us your SEO title and description: Tell us what you’d call it in Google (under 60 characters) and write something short that makes people click (under 155 characters).


How to format your article

I know formatting sounds boring, but it actually matters when people are reading on their phones:

Headings: Use H2 and H3. That’s it. Don’t go deeper. People need clear markers to know what section they’re in.

Keep paragraphs short: 2–4 sentences max. Long paragraphs don’t work. People read on mobile now.

Use lists: bullet points for tips, benefits, or items. Numbers for step-by-step processes or lists. People love lists. Easy to scan.

Bold the important stuff: If there’s something people really need to remember, bold it. Just don’t overdo it.

Use real examples: Talk about actual digital healthcare tools you’ve seen or used. Tell what worked, what didn’t. Way more interesting than theory.

Include screenshots or descriptions: If you mention digital healthcare apps or platforms, describe what they look like or what they do. Make it easy for readers to picture it.


Here’s the deal:

Our articles: YES. Link to other Dion Health Web posts when relevant. Helps readers explore and helps us.[attached_file:1]

Legit health and digital healthcare resources: YES. Health organizations, research sites, trusted medical sources, official health platforms.

Your own health tech products or services: NO. Don’t link to your health app or your digital healthcare consulting business. We can tell.

Affiliate links: NO. No commissions disguised as helpful digital healthcare advice. People see through it.

Promotional spam: NO. Random links to random health apps you don’t actually use? Nope.

Your website in your bio: YES. One link. Keep it professional and relevant.

Simple rule: If this link helps the reader understand or use digital healthcare better, include it. If it’s just promotional? Don’t do it.


Write us your author bio

At the end of your article, include a short bio about yourself. Keep it real. 50–100 words. Tell us:

  • Your name and what you actually do in digital healthcare or health tech

  • Your experience or expertise with digital healthcare

  • What you specialize in or what you’re known for

  • Where can people find you online

Here’s an example:

Dr. James worked as a primary care physician for 8 years before transitioning into digital healthcare. He’s seen firsthand how telemedicine and health apps are changing patient care. He’s worked with multiple health tech platforms and understands both the promise and the limitations. He writes about making digital healthcare accessible and useful. Find him on LinkedIn or his health tech blog.


How to actually submit your article

You wrote something good. Now what?

Step 1: Email us your pitch first. Don’t send the whole article yet. Subject line: “Guest Article Pitch – Digital Healthcare.”

Tell us what the article’s about (a few bullet points), why our readers would care, and why you’re qualified to write it. Keep it short—one paragraph max.

Step 2: Wait for our response. Usually takes like 5–7 business days. If we like your idea, we’ll say yes. If it’s not quite right, we’ll be honest.

Step 3: Write the full article. Follow what I mentioned above. Make it genuine. Be honest. Ensure it’s invaluable.

Step 4: Send it as a Google Doc or Word file. Include your SEO title, meta description, author bio, and notes about where internal links should go.

Step 5: We review it. Might be small edits, might be bigger changes. We’ll let you know what’s happening and when it goes live. Then you can share it everywhere.

That’s it. Pretty straightforward.


Why we actually need you

Here’s the honest part. Dion Health Web exists because people like you share what they actually know. Every article helps someone. It may help them finally understand how digital healthcare can improve their health. Maybe it stops them from wasting money on health apps that don’t actually work. It may give them the confidence to try telemedicine for the first time.

Digital healthcare information is everywhere, but much of it is either too technical, overhyped, or just trying to sell you something. We’re trying to be different. Honest. Actually helpful. Actually practical.

If you care about helping people benefit from digital healthcare and want an audience that will listen and take action, this is the place. I believe what you know could change how someone approaches their health and wellness through technology.

Ready to write for us about digital healthcare? Send your pitch over. We’re actually excited to see what you’ve got.