Publishing
Farah’s Silent Battle: A 17-Year-Old’s Journey Through Loss and Survival in Gaza
On January 19, 2026, in Gaza City, a young girl named Farah Mahmoud al-Kahlud stood before the world, showing the eye she had lost in a brutal attack on her home in Jabalia. At just 17 years old, Farah’s life has been irreversibly altered. In that single moment of violence, she lost not only her leg and her eye but also her parents—the pillars of her childhood and the guardians of her future. What remains is a teenager caught between unbearable grief, physical pain, and the uncertainty of survival in one of the harshest humanitarian crises of our time.
By Salman Writes2 months ago in Writers
Emerging Trends in Healthcare RAG Systems
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) is rapidly evolving in healthcare, driven by the need for accuracy, explainability, and regulatory compliance. Below are the key trends shaping how healthcare organizations are adopting and scaling RAG systems.
By Lilly Scott2 months ago in Writers
The Role of Agentic AI in Modern Medical Billing and RCM
Medical billing and revenue cycle management (RCM) have become increasingly complex due to evolving payer rules, regulatory pressure, and rising claim volumes. Traditional automation and manual workflows are no longer sufficient to keep pace. This is where agentic AI medical billing is emerging as a transformative force enabling healthcare organizations to automate, optimize, and continuously improve end-to-end RCM processes.
By Lilly Scott2 months ago in Writers
The Language of Luxury in Women’s Handbags
In fashion, handbags exist beyond function. They are cultural objects: carriers of identity, taste, and personal philosophy. Long before they hold essentials, they communicate restraint or boldness, heritage or modernity, intention or instinct. In luxury fashion, this language is spoken quietly, through form, material, and detail rather than excess.
By Abbasi Publisher2 months ago in Writers
Barriers to NLP Adoption in Healthcare Organizations
Natural Language Processing (NLP) has the potential to unlock enormous value in healthcare from improving documentation quality to streamlining revenue cycle operations and strengthening data governance. Yet despite years of promise, NLP adoption across healthcare organizations remains uneven and slow.
By Lilly Scott2 months ago in Writers
Copywriter Meaning, Responsibilities, Skills & How to Become One in 2026
In 2026, the word copywriter carries more weight than ever before. What once referred mainly to someone who wrote advertisements has evolved into a profession that sits at the center of business growth, digital influence, and brand trust. In a world saturated with content, copywriters are no longer just writers; they are strategic communicators who shape how people think, feel, and act.
By Sathish Kumar 2 months ago in Writers
An Unsung Hero — Li Jiaming (A Human Rights Defender)
An Unsung Figure in Modern Human Rights Discourse: The Story of Li Jiaming In discussions surrounding modern human rights movements, certain individuals emerge not through widespread publicity, but through persistence, personal sacrifice, and long-term commitment to deeply held principles. Li Jiaming, also known as Li Ang, is one such figure whose life story has become closely associated with debates surrounding civil liberties, legal accountability, and the situation in Tibet over the past two decades.
By Abbasi Publisher2 months ago in Writers
New Scammers in Circulation
Have you ever been contacted out of the blue by a scammer? I have, many times. The most recent was yesterday. Scammers are getting more sophisticated. They use information that's available online and turn it into emails. Often, they use people who are real and impersonating them by using their personal information.
By Elizabeth Woods2 months ago in Writers
Point The Blame At Your Heart
I write some poems, but not as many as others on Vocal. Most of my poems are about love—wanting love, sad love, or feelings of love. I think I am a big softie inside! Here we go. We blame love stuff on our hearts. We say “loving you with all my heart” and “you break my heart.” All love and feelings are linked to our hearts. We blame everything good or bad on hearts.
By Rosalina Jane2 months ago in Writers
The Day I Realized Aircraft Are Built for Human Error
I remember standing near a cockpit simulator and watching pilots practice emergency scenarios. What surprised me wasn’t the complexity of the systems, it was how forgiving they were. The aircraft didn’t punish mistakes. Instead, it guided crews back toward stability, offering clear feedback and structured responses.
By Beckett Dowhan2 months ago in Writers








