The American Medical Association's top 10 nearest neighbors span government health agencies, medical journals, news publishers, and political journalists — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest. The scores compress into a narrow band from 0.96 (CDC Director) down to 0.93 (Gates Foundation), a flat distribution with no structural spike.
The subcategory mix tells the clearest story. Four of the top 10 are news publishers or magazines: Health Affairs (0.95), WSJ Health News (0.94), Reuters Health (0.94), and JAMA (0.92). Three are government or government-adjacent organizations: CDC Director (0.96), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (0.94), and U.S. Surgeon General (0.94). NIH (0.94) represents research organizations. The remaining two — Schneier Blog (0.94), a security-focused blog, and Gates Foundation (0.90), a non-profit — are the outliers that break the health-and-government pattern. The AMA is the only Non-Profit in the top 10; Gates Foundation shares that subcategory and sits at the bottom of the set. Notably, no other medical association appears in the top 10 — the nearest neighbors are defined by health media and public health infrastructure, not peer organizations.
The flat shape across this mix points to an audience that moves fluidly across institutional health authority, health journalism, and policy media rather than concentrating around any single type.