Corrections Policy
If a page includes an error, unclear wording, outdated evidence framing, or a safety statement that needs correction, we aim to revise it promptly and transparently rather than quietly leaving a misleading version in place.
Supplement content is only as trustworthy as its willingness to correct visible mistakes. A publisher-grade health site should make the correction path real, not decorative.
Why this exists
Meaningful fixes should be visible
This page explains how factual corrections, clarifications, and material updates should be handled so stale wording does not hide behind old dates.
How corrections should be handled
When a correction is justified, we want the page updated promptly and clearly rather than quietly left misleading. Some fixes are light wording clarifications. Others change the practical answer, safety framing, or next-step guidance enough that the update should be more visible.
What makes a correction request easier to verify
The fastest correction requests are specific: page URL, exact sentence or section, what looks wrong, and the supporting source or reasoning. Broad complaints are slower to verify because they do not show what needs fixing.
Corrections versus updates
Not every change is a correction. Some are normal updates triggered by new evidence, changed product labels, stronger internal-linking structure, or better editorial standards. But if the old version materially risked confusing readers, we treat that as more than a routine polish pass.
Why this matters on a supplement site
Supplement topics are unusually vulnerable to stale framing, overstatement, and safety omissions. That means the correction path is not a side feature. It is part of how trust is maintained on a site dealing with health-adjacent decisions.
Key takeaways from Corrections Policy
- Meaningful errors should be fixed clearly, not left to age in place.
- Specific correction requests are easier to verify and act on.
- Some changes are routine updates; others are material corrections.
- Correction policy is part of trust, not a footer formality.
What Can Trigger a Correction
- Factual errors. Incorrect ingredient details, dose math, certification claims, or source interpretation.
- Outdated framing. Old wording that no longer matches current evidence, product labels, or site standards.
- Safety gaps. Missing or unclear interaction, side-effect, lab, or referral context on a meaningful page.
- Structural confusion. Page wording or navigation that routes readers toward the wrong next step.
