EPISODE · Feb 17, 2026 · 53 MIN
How to Keep Bad Medicine from Killing Your Novel’s Credibility
from Christian Publishing Show
Have you ever watched a medical show and thought, “Is that how CPR really works”?Your readers are thinking the same thing about your book.In the Google era, writing sloppy medical details was risky for your writing career. In the AI era, they’re deadly to your credibility and career. Readers now carry little AI tools in their pockets that can pass medical exams. If your character survives a car crash and goes boxing in the next chapter, someone will notice.In this month’s episode, I interview physician and award-winning novelist Ronda Wells of NovelMalpractice.com about how to write medically accurate fiction, even if you have zero medical background.You’ll learnHow concussions and amnesia can be related (but aren’t always!)How to use medical events (and their consequences) to increase tension in your storyWhy the “sip and die” trope rarely makes senseHow historical context changes everything from treatments to fatalityMedical accuracy does not kill drama. It intensifies it.If you want deeper tension, stronger verisimilitude, and stories that honor your readers’ trust, listen in or read the blog version.Blog Link: https://www.christianpublishingshow.com/how-to-keep-bad-medicine-from-killing-your-novels-credibility/Support the show
What this episode covers
Have you ever watched a medical show and thought, “Is that how CPR really works”? Your readers are thinking the same thing about your book. In the Google era, writing sloppy medical details was risky for your writing career. In the AI era, they’re deadly to your credibility and career. Readers now carry little AI tools in their pockets that can pass medical exams. If your character survives a car crash and goes boxing in the next chapter, someone will notice. In this month’s episode, I interv...
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How to Keep Bad Medicine from Killing Your Novel’s Credibility
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