Scope of Review
Pages discussing diabetes management, glucose monitoring, medications, A1C, or insurance-supported care should be reviewed with attention to current standards of care, patient safety, and the distinction between general education and personalized medical advice.
Sources We Aim to Rely On
- Professional guidance: Diabetes care standards and recognized clinical guidance.
- Public health sources: Major public health and patient education resources.
- Clinical experience context: Service descriptions should reflect how the actual care model works in practice.
What Medical Review Does Not Mean
Medical review does not create a doctor-patient relationship through the website alone, and it does not replace individualized medical advice. The website is educational and service-oriented. Patients still need direct clinical assessment for diagnosis, treatment changes, and urgent concerns.
When Content Should Be Updated
Pages should be updated when service details change, when there are material changes in diabetes guidance, or when readers identify outdated or unclear information that could affect understanding. High-impact pages should be reviewed more regularly than minor marketing pages.
How Readers Can Raise Concerns
If a reader sees an issue that may affect safety, accuracy, or clarity, they should use the Contact page so the content can be reviewed and corrected as needed.
Related Trust Pages
Medical Review Team explains the roles involved in reviewing educational content, while Editorial Policy explains how topics are planned and updated.