Disclaimer: Links on this site are referral links and I may earn a fee from Mercor or Micro1 if you click them. I do not work for Micro1 or Mercor.


Editorial Policy

1. Mission Statement

Applied Clinical Judgement exists to improve understanding of patient-free, remote clinical work that relies on professional judgement, reasoning, and experience.

Our mission is to provide clear, realistic, and balanced editorial content that helps clinicians understand how their expertise may be applied outside traditional clinical settings — particularly in guidance development, decision-making frameworks, and system-level work.

We aim to support informed choice, not promote volume participation.


2. Audience

Our content is written for experienced clinicians and allied health professionals, including (but not limited to) doctors, nurses, allied health professionals, pharmacists, psychologists, researchers, and educators.

The site is intended for professionals who:

  • are grounded in evidence-based practice
  • are considering remote or portfolio work
  • want clarity about expectations, cognitive demands, and professional implications
  • value thoughtful analysis over promotional language

Content assumes professional literacy and clinical experience, while avoiding unnecessary jargon or insider shorthand.


3. Content Standards

Accuracy and Credibility

All content is researched and written with care, drawing on:

  • established clinical practice and professional norms
  • publicly available information from opportunity providers
  • regulatory, ethical, and professional standards where relevant

Where information is uncertain, evolving, or based on limited disclosure, this is stated clearly.

Clarity and Realism

We aim to describe opportunities honestly, including:

  • the type of judgement required
  • typical demands and constraints
  • areas of ambiguity or complexity

We avoid exaggerated claims, unrealistic earning expectations, or guarantees of suitability.

Accessibility

Content is designed to be readable on desktop and mobile devices and structured for clarity. We aim for an inclusive approach that supports neurodiverse readers and those engaging with content in limited time or cognitive bandwidth.

Transparency

Affiliate links, commercial relationships, or potential conflicts of interest are clearly disclosed.


4. Editorial Process

Content Creation

Content is created by individuals with experience in healthcare, clinical systems, or professional practice.

Artificial intelligence tools may be used to support — but not replace — editorial judgement. This may include:

  • drafting or refining text under human oversight
  • improving clarity, structure, or accessibility
  • summarising large or complex source materials
  • supporting research and comparison
  • generating images or design assets
  • general ideation and planning

Final editorial responsibility always rests with a human reviewer.

Review and Updates

Content is reviewed periodically and updated where appropriate, particularly when:

  • opportunity details change
  • industry practices evolve
  • regulatory or professional expectations shift

5. Independence and Editorial Integrity

Applied Clinical Judgement maintains editorial independence.

While the site may generate revenue through affiliate relationships or referrals, these do not determine:

  • which opportunities are covered
  • how they are described
  • whether limitations or risks are discussed

Editorial judgement is not for sale.


6. Affiliate and Referral Policy

Some content contains affiliate or referral links to third-party platforms or organisations.

If a reader clicks an affiliate link and later completes a qualifying action, Applied Clinical Judgement may receive a referral fee. This:

  • does not affect the reader’s terms with the third party
  • does not increase costs to the reader
  • does not imply endorsement or suitability

Affiliate relationships help support the research and editorial work involved in explaining opportunities clearly, but they do not influence our assessments or framing.


7. User Engagement

We encourage readers to engage thoughtfully with the content, reflect on suitability, and undertake their own due diligence before pursuing any opportunity.

We may offer optional updates or communications to share new editorial content or emerging opportunity types. Engagement is voluntary and can be discontinued at any time.


8. Feedback and Corrections

We value professional trust and accuracy.

If you believe content is inaccurate, misleading, or incomplete, we welcome feedback and will review concerns promptly. Corrections or clarifications will be made where appropriate.


9. Style and Tone

Our editorial tone is:

  • professional
  • reflective
  • measured
  • analytical

We avoid hype, recruitment language, or sales-driven framing. The aim is to respect clinicians’ experience and judgement, not persuade them to act.

Design and language are intentionally calm and uncluttered, supporting careful reading rather than rapid conversion.

Author Card – Sean Key
Sean Key – Digital Health Programme Manager

Written by

Sean Key

Digital Health Senior Programme Manager  ·  29 years’ NHS & private sector experience

Sean has spent nearly three decades delivering complex digital programmes across the NHS and private healthcare — from LIMS and PACS deployments to primary care, urgent care, mental health, and national interoperability work. Not a clinician. His perspective is that of a practitioner who understands how digital health really gets built, procured, and adopted in the real world.

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