Harvard Health's top 10 neighbors are dominated by news publishers and magazines — not other educational organizations or health institutions. The shape is flat: scores run from 0.97 down to 0.95 with no single standout, and the mix spans several distinct subcategories rather than converging on one.
Six of the ten neighbors are News Publishers: NPR Health News (0.97), WSJ Health News (0.96), WSJ Business News (0.96), USA TODAY Health (0.96), WSJ Law News (0.96), and CNBC Now (0.96). Two more are Magazines: TIME Health (0.96) and Harvard Business Review (0.95). The remaining two are Celebrities and Influencers: Sanjay Gupta (0.96), a TV Personality, and Guy Kawasaki (0.95), a Tech Personality. No other Education subcategory entity appears in the top 10 — TED Talks, the one fellow Education organization in the broader results, sits outside the top 10.
The cross-kind pattern here is the defining feature: Harvard Health's audience shape aligns most tightly with serious news consumers — people who follow financial, legal, and health journalism — rather than with academic or educational content. The presence of WSJ Law News and CNBC Now alongside health-specific outlets suggests the audience is defined less by health interest alone and more by a broad appetite for credentialed, information-dense media.
This cluster points to an audience that treats health content as one strand within a wider diet of professional and journalistic media.