Editorial Policy

Health Habit Guide publishes general habit guidance for sleep drift, movement restart, nutrition reset, and recovery-boundary questions. It does not present those pages as individualized care plans.

Primary public byline: Julian Vance, Habit Guidance Reviewer. Review layer: Health Habit Guide Review Desk.

What must be checked before a page goes live

  • Published guides are expected to show Written by, Reviewed by, dates, audience, what the page does not replace, and when to seek licensed care when the topic calls for it.
  • Health pages should distinguish general education from individual medical advice and remove unverified claims before publication.
  • Corrections should be logged when evidence, source interpretation, or a health boundary changes the reader decision.

Scope and care boundary

  • Pages stay inside routine design, pacing, and restart questions that can be answered as general education.
  • If symptoms, injury, clinician-directed limits, pregnancy, or safety concerns change the answer, the page should say readers need licensed care.
  • General education should not be written with pseudo-clinical certainty or care-plan language.

Evidence and uncertainty

  • Source-linked claims stay tied to public guidance or remain labeled limited or uncertain.
  • Unsupported benefit claims, dramatic body promises, and pseudo-medical shortcuts are removed instead of softened.
  • When evidence is mixed, the page should slow down the promise rather than hide the uncertainty.

Advice and evidence boundaries

  • General habit guidance is not presented as personalized medical care
  • When symptoms, clinician-directed limits, injuries, or condition-specific risks change the answer, the page should say so clearly
  • Missing or unverified claims stay labeled as unknowns or get removed before publication

When to seek licensed care

Pages should tell readers to seek licensed care when symptoms escalate, safety is unclear, injury or clinician-directed limits change the plan, or repeated failed resets suggest the problem is no longer routine design alone.

How automation is handled

Automation can help organize drafts, but health framing, evidence summaries, escalation language, and advice boundaries are expected to be reviewed before publication.

Corrections and updates

If a material factual error is found, we update the page and note the correction when the change meaningfully affects the reader’s decision or care boundary.

Commercial-content separation

Editorial scoring, comparisons, and explainers stay separate from sponsor, affiliate, or placement considerations, and ad placement must not interrupt trust, escalation, or care-boundary copy.

Corrections Policy | Advertising Disclosure

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