Pangambam S
Pangambam S runs The Singju Post, publishing full‑text transcripts of interviews, podcasts and public speeches across health, technology and public policy. On the health beat, their coverage is defined by bringing specialist voices in longevity, mental health and relationships into searchable, quotable text.
Health, longevity and everyday wellbeing
One recent piece transcribes a Diary Of A CEO episode featuring anti‑aging expert Dr Darren Candow, focusing on creatine, muscle health and longevity. By putting the full discussion into text, Pangambam retains detailed explanations and practical insight that would be diluted in shorter write‑ups. Another transcript picks up a conversation in which Scott Galloway uses a striking set of statistics on sexting and teen friendships to illustrate the isolation and risk facing young men in the United States. The choice to give that topic full space positions health not just as physiology or clinical care, but as the emotional, social and digital environment young people inhabit. Across these pieces, the emphasis is on preserving long exchanges with experts and commentators so that readers can access the nuance of their arguments rather than a few pulled quotes.
AI, infrastructure and societal change
Pangambam’s archive also includes a transcript with Kevin Kelly on how artificial intelligence can drive a “second industrial revolution,” reshaping work, production and the broader economy. That macro frame sets health and wellbeing against a backdrop of technological and economic transformation rather than treating them as isolated topics. A full‑text record of Vice President JD Vance’s speech at the Paris AI Summit 2025 brings in a political perspective on artificial intelligence and its regulation. Another transcript covers a press conference where Donald Trump announces an AI infrastructure project called Stargate, documenting his remarks about large‑scale investment and innovation. Taken together, these pieces show Pangambam treating health as one strand within a larger story about how AI, infrastructure and governance reshape daily life.
Approach: long‑form, text‑first curation
Pangambam works as a curator and transcriber, centring original spoken content rather than producing conventional reported articles. Pieces are presented as complete transcripts, preserving the sequence of the conversation or event and allowing readers to follow the argument as it unfolded. That format distinguishes the work from a standard health beat reporter who might summarise key points, because Pangambam prioritises accuracy, chronology and the speaker’s language over synthesis and commentary. The site draws on voices ranging from technologists and business commentators to political leaders, which gives the health and wellbeing coverage a cross‑domain tone and situates personal health decisions within broader economic and policy debates. The work provides a text‑first record of how debates about supplements, mental health, relationships and AI policy are framed by the people driving them.
4 more health journalists.
Alex Storey
Alex Storey is a journalist at LBC whose work is driven by specific cases that test professional conduct and accountability in health and the public sector. He covers health as his main beat, focusing on the point where individual decisions by clinicians or officials meet public trust in institutions. His reporting is incident-first and case-led, using concrete episodes to show how rules, ethics and policy work in real life. Recent pieces include a disciplinary case where a nurse was struck off after linking a patient’s cancer to Covid jabs, and coverage of civil servants being “paid to play Grand Theft Auto” as “lived experience” training. Across these stories, he examines how professionals, regulators and officials explain their decisions, and what that reveals about trust, responsibility and the standards expected of people in positions of authority.
Alexandra Thompson
Alexandra Thompson is an assistant news editor focused on health who treats health claims as hypotheses to be tested rather than messages to be repeated. She works at New Scientist, combining editing with frontline reporting on ageing brains, cognitive health, chronic illness, contested treatments and infectious disease. Her beat centres on how neuroscience and psychology intersect with everyday health choices and on how scientific findings translate into real-world outcomes for people living with illness. She examines lifestyle advice, rehabilitation programmes and outbreak guidance against current evidence, clarifying risk without overstating it and giving space to controversy without sensationalising it. Alongside written news she appears in audio and video formats, bringing the same clear, news-driven approach to live discussions and helping shape the daily health agenda while keeping a tight focus on evidence and impact.
Alice Wilkinson
Alice Wilkinson investigates how everyday habits, products and routines shape sleep and long-term wellbeing, using test-driven health features to separate hype from real benefit. She holds a senior role on The Telegraph’s health features team, writing and shaping consumer-focused coverage that blends personal trial with clear expert evidence. Her core beat is sleep as a practical, solvable part of daily life, from detailed comparisons of magnesium supplements to service pieces on how sleeping position affects health over time. She treats supplements as a crowded, over-claimed market that demands careful testing and clear-eyed reporting. Alongside long-form features she writes weekly health desk dispatches on sleep, stress and concentration. Across her work she combines substantial self-testing, specialist insight and plain, unfussy prose to give readers measurable, realistic changes they can make.
Ally Head
Ally Head connects performance-focused fitness reporting with women’s health, sustainability and relationships, using her own endurance training and health history to stress-test trends against expert guidance. She is Senior Health, Sustainability and Relationships Editor at Marie Claire UK, where she shapes the health agenda across training, wellbeing and conscious living and writes and commissions news, topical features and SEO-led long-form pieces. A ten-time marathoner and Boston-qualifying runner, she focuses on structured, realistic training plans, strength and conditioning for women who run, and performance longevity. Her women’s health work centres on hormones, chronic conditions and fact versus fiction wellness claims. She also covers sustainability as conscious living and relationships, mental resilience and lifestyle features, favouring plain language, lived experience, specialist commentary and clear, repeatable routines. She has previously produced similar content for Women’s Health, Stylist, Glamour and Grazia.