Editorial Policy

Evidence before enthusiasm. Safety before promotion.

Our editorial policy is built for healthcare decisions: careful claims, plain language, jurisdiction-aware access information, and transparent separation between education and commercial relationships.

Editorial Principles

  • Clinical accuracy: medical terminology must be used correctly and explained plainly.
  • Public-health usefulness: content helps readers understand risks, access, evidence, and care decisions.
  • Jurisdiction awareness: legality and availability must be tied to countries, provinces, states, or access pathways.
  • Transparency: editorial pages, provider listings, sponsorship, and affiliate relationships must be clearly separated.
  • No hype: content must avoid cure claims, miracle framing, urgency, and wellness-influencer language.

Claims Standards

We use careful claim language such as “may help,” “has been studied for,” “is being investigated for,” “is approved for,” and “is used off-label for.” We avoid implying that psychedelic-assisted therapy is safe for everyone, legal everywhere, or proven for conditions where the evidence is still early.

Directory Separation

Directory Disclosure

Provider listings are informational and do not constitute medical advice, endorsement, or a guarantee of care quality. Paid, sponsored, or affiliate-supported listings are labeled where applicable. Editorial content is produced separately from provider listing relationships.