
How to write blog posts that Google actually trusts (A science content framework from 5 investigative articles)
Most science content on the internet works like this: "Studies show X causes Y." (links one PubMed abstract) That's the bar. One link. One claim. Move on. And honestly? For most topics, it works. Google doesn't care if your article about CSS grid has peer-reviewed citations. But the moment you write about health, finance, or anything that affects someone's life decisions, YMYL content (Your Money or Your Life) , that approach will get you buried. Not penalized. Just... ignored. Outranked by WebMD, Healthline, and whoever has more trust signals than you. We figured this out the hard way. At Elyvora US , we build evidence-based oral health content. Over the past few months, we've published 5 investigative articles, each citing 19-27 peer-reviewed studies , and developed a framework that consistently gets them indexed by Google in under 15 minutes. Not days. Minutes. Here's what we learned about what works, what doesn't, and what most content creators get completely wrong. What most peopl
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