ObGyn Intelligence: The Evidence of Women’s Health

ObGyn Intelligence: The Evidence of Women’s Health

AI Guide - Medical and ObGyn Intelligence

How to Use AI to Draft, Edit, and Peer-Review Your Next Manuscript

Amos Grünebaum, MD's avatar
Amos Grünebaum, MD
Apr 06, 2026
∙ Paid

Academic writing is one of the most demanding and least taught skills in clinical medicine. Clinicians are trained extensively in how to practice. They are trained almost not at all in how to write about it. The result is a literature full of papers that contain genuinely important clinical science buried under prose that is unnecessarily dense, poorly organized, and harder to read than it needs to be.

AI does not write manuscripts for you, and it should not. But it is genuinely useful at several specific stages of the manuscript process, from organizing your argument to editing for clarity to anticipating the reviewer criticisms that are likely to come. This course covers how to use it well at each stage, and what to avoid.

ObGyn Intelligence: The Evidence of Women’s Health is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

User's avatar

Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of Amos Grünebaum, MD.

Or purchase a paid subscription.
© 2026 Amos Grünebaum, MD · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start your SubstackGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture