I help health brands, wellness founders, and medical professionals sound human on LinkedIn — without losing scientific accuracy

I specialize in crafting research-backed, emotionally intelligent content for health brands and professionals.

My words live on LinkedIn, blogs, newsletters, and web pages — where they teach, inspire, and build trust.

WHAT I BRING TO THE TABLE

Scientific Authority

First-class degree in Medical Biochemistry.

Hands-on lab and research experience in molecular biology, diagnostics, and reproductive health. I don't just Google topics — I’ve worked on them. I'm also a published researcher in peer-reviewed journals

Storytelling That Sells

Expert at crafting scroll-stopping LinkedIn posts, health blog content, and branded narratives that build trust and spark engagement.

Impact-Driven Voice

My writing has supported real-world health advocacy, from IDP camps to World Bank labs. I know how to talk to people — and how to move them.

Proven LinkedIn Performance

Over 6,000+ followers, 4,000+ weekly post impressions, and high engagement rates. I know what works on the platform — and I help clients win on it.

MY STORY

Hi, I’m Esther Dumebi — a science-trained, storytelling-driven health content writer.

I translate complex medical and wellness information into content your audience will actually care about.

My words help health brands sound smart and human. I’ve worked in reproductive health labs, contributed to World Bank-sponsored studies, and ghostwritten high-performing LinkedIn content for health professionals and wellness brands.

MY SPECIALTY:

I specialize in writing health content that connects, converts, and educates. My focus areas include:

  • Ghostwriting LinkedIn posts for doctors, researchers, and health startups

  • Long-form blog posts and thought leadership articles

  • Wellness & nutrition storytelling

  • Public health advocacy content

  • Brand-aligned storytelling for health and lifestyle brands

WHY HIRE ME?

You know how hard it is to find someone who understands the science, and can actually write it in an engaging and interesting way? Well, that’s exactly what I do!

I’m not just a writer. I’m a biochemist who’s worked in real research labs, participated in World Bank-sponsored health initiatives, and conducted field research in reproductive health and endometriosis. I understand how to communicate complex health topics in a way that the everyday reader or busy executive  can understand.

My posts get thousands of impressions weekly on LinkedIn, My words drive engagement, trust, and clarity. I help brands, researchers, and thought leaders sound like the expert they are, without sounding robotic.

ARTICLES I'VE WRITTEN

DIABETES: THE SUGAR-COATED EPIDEMIC WE’RE IGNORING

If you grew up in a Nigerian home, you’ve probably heard someone say, “It’s just sugar. It’s not that serious.”But diabetes? It’s very serious.Diabetes isn’t just “too much sugar.” It’s a chronic metabolic disease marked by elevated levels of blood glucose (hyperglycemia), either due to inadequate insulin production or the body’s inability to effectively use the insulin it produces. The two major types are Type 1 (autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing cells) and Type 2 (insulin resistance...

CANCER IN NIGERIA: THE SILENT WAR WE DON’T TALK ABOUT ENOUGH

CancerThe word alone carries the weight of finality. For many Nigerians, it sounds like a foreign disease. Something that happens to “them,” not “us”, yet every year, thousands of our own, are quietly diagnosed with this condition.In Nigeria, we often think cancer is a ‘western problem’. Something you hear about in Hollywood movies or on foreign medical channels. But cancer is quietly growing in our own backyards, invading homes, cutting lives short, and leaving families scrambling for answers.C...

HEART ATTACK DOESN’T JUST HAPPEN IN OYIBO MOVIES ALONE

Let’s start by killing the myth: Heart attacks are not just for old white men in American movies clutching their chest and falling dramatically.It happens here. In Nigeria. Every day.And it’s not always dramatic. Sometimes it’s chest discomfort, shortness of breath, jaw pain, shoulder pain, nausea, or even just fatigue. That’s the scary part; it doesn’t always announce itself the way we expect.A heart attack (aka myocardial infarction) happens when blood flow to a part of the heart is blocked. T...

Follow Me