Mayo Clinic's nearest audiences are dominated by political journalists, commentators, and anti-Trump political figures — not other health or research organizations. Across the top 10 neighbors, the subcategory breakdown runs heavily toward Journalists and Politicians, with only USA TODAY Health (0.91) representing health media and no other Research Organizations appearing in the set.
The shape is flat: scores range from 0.92 down to 0.91 with almost no variation, meaning no single neighbor dominates and no structural gap separates the top from the bottom. George F. Will leads at 0.92, followed closely by Tom Nichols (0.92), Bill Kristol (0.92), USA TODAY Health (0.91), The Lincoln Project (0.91), and Chuck Todd (0.91). The remaining four — George Conway, Michael Beschloss, Rick Wilson, and Marc E. Elias — span Politicians, Authors, and Professionals, all scoring between 0.91 and 0.91. The subcategory tally across all 10: five Journalists, three Politicians, one News Publisher, and one Political Group. That is the composition of this audience neighborhood — center-left political media consumers, not health information seekers.
The data suggests Mayo Clinic's audience, in terms of shape, looks far more like the readership of political commentary than the following of peer health institutions.