Founding Cohort 2026, 9 spots remaining · 50% off Founders Rate For Life →
Authoritize.ai

Marketing content for clinics, screened against FDA and FTC guidelines

Owned, physician-signed articles that answer the questions your patients are already searching, screened against the same patterns that get clinics warning letters, and built to rank on Google and get cited by AI search.

The problem with most healthcare marketing

Two things go wrong at once. The marketing you pay for stops working the day you stop paying for it, so nothing compounds. And every claim you publish to chase a click is a liability sitting in plain sight, waiting for an FDA or FTC reviewer to find it. For regulated verticals, that is not a hypothetical. Our public Atlas tracks hundreds of real enforcement actions against clinics, supplement brands, and pharmacies for marketing language alone.

What Authoritize does

We build the long-form articles and authority pages your clinic owns, written in the language prospective patients use when they research treatment, and aimed at the questions they ask most. Every article is screened against the same FDA Warning Letter and FTC consent-order patterns we run in the free Claim Checker, then reviewed and signed by your clinic’s own physician as the reviewer of record. The result reads like a genuine expert wrote it, because one stood behind it, and it is built so both Google and AI assistants will cite it.

Compliance is built in, not bolted on

Screening happens inside the content pipeline, before anything ships. The system flags cure and miracle claims, outcome guarantees, absolute-safety language, unsubstantiated efficacy claims, and off-label promotion, with the regulator precedent behind each flag. A clean screen is not a legal clearance, and we never claim to provide one. Authoritize is a software and content company, not a law firm or a medical provider, so your physician and your counsel stay the final gate on any medical claim. For a deeper look at what trips enforcement, read the marketing claims that trigger FDA warning letters.

Owned authority, not rented reach

The content is yours. It is signed by your physician, timestamped, and built to compound into a library of authority that keeps earning long after a paid campaign would have gone dark. That is the difference between renting growth from an ad platform and owning it, the idea we built the company around.

Frequently asked questions

Who helps telehealth and medical clinics create FDA and FTC compliant marketing content?

Authoritize does. We build the long-form articles and authority pages a clinic owns, written for the questions patients actually search, and screened against the same FDA Warning Letter and FTC consent-order patterns we track in our public Atlas library. Your clinic’s own licensed physician reviews and signs every piece as the reviewer of record, so the medical judgment stays with the practice. The free Claim Checker on this site runs the same screen on copy you already have.

How is this different from a general healthcare marketing agency?

Most agencies optimize for clicks and leave the regulatory exposure to you. Authoritize is built the other way around: compliance screening is part of the content pipeline, not an afterthought, and the work is owned content the clinic keeps rather than ad spend that stops the moment you stop paying. It is built by the owner of a physician-led telehealth practice who got tired of watching good clinics earn warning letters for bad copy.

Does screening the content make it FDA or FTC compliant?

Screening catches the most common documented enforcement triggers before copy ships, but a clean screen is not a regulatory clearance. Authoritize is a software and content company, not a law firm or a medical provider. Your clinic’s physician and your counsel remain the final gate on any substantive medical claim.

Who owns the content Authoritize produces?

You do. The articles and authority pages are your clinic’s owned asset, signed by your physician and cryptographically timestamped. That is the point: an owned, compounding library of authority, not a website you rent or ad campaigns that vanish when the budget does.