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Editorial Policy

✍️ Editorial Policy

How we research, write, and review every article on 247 Healthcare. Transparency in our process is how we earn your trust.

Last updated: May 22, 2026 15+ specialist doctors NABH-accredited backing
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Our promise to readers: Every article on 247healthcare.blog is researched from authoritative sources, written by trained health writers, and reviewed by a specialist doctor matched to the topic before publication. We will never publish content we wouldn't share with our own families.

Our 4-step content process

1 πŸ”¬

Research

Peer-reviewed sources, clinical guidelines, and expert interviews

2 ✏️

Write

Trained health writers produce a draft following our style guide

3 🩺

Doctor review

A specialist physician matched to the topic reviews for accuracy

4 πŸ“…

Update

Reviewed periodically and updated when guidelines change

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Our mission

247 Healthcare exists to make accurate, evidence-based health information accessible to everyone. Too much health content on the internet is either oversimplified to the point of inaccuracy, or hidden behind jargon that excludes the very people who need it most.

We sit in the middle: clinically accurate, but written so a non-medical reader can actually understand and use the information. Our editorial team includes both qualified writers and practising doctors, ensuring every article delivers both clarity and credibility.

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How we research

Before a single word is written, our writers gather evidence from authoritative sources. We do not rely on other blogs, AI-generated summaries, or marketing material. Our standard reference hierarchy is:

Tier 1 β€” Primary sources

  • Peer-reviewed clinical research (PubMed, Cochrane)
  • Clinical practice guidelines (WHO, NIH, AHA, IDF)
  • Regulatory agency publications (FDA, EMA, CDSCO)

Tier 2 β€” Trusted institutions

  • Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Johns Hopkins
  • NHS, CDC, MedlinePlus
  • Academic medical centre publications

When clinical evidence is mixed or evolving, we say so. We do not present uncertainty as fact, and we update articles when new research changes the recommended approach.

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Medical review process

Every article published on 247 Healthcare goes through review by a qualified physician before it goes live. We match the reviewer to the article topic. Cardiology articles are reviewed by cardiologists. Urology articles by urologists. Nutrition articles by physicians with relevant clinical experience.

Our medical reviewers are affiliated with Vivekananda Hospital, a NABH-accredited 100-bed multispecialty hospital established in 1995 in Hyderabad. Each reviewer is named on the articles they review, with their credentials, specialisation, and a link to their professional profile.

βœ“Clinical accuracy of all medical claims, dosages, and protocols
βœ“Adherence to current clinical guidelines and evidence-based medicine
βœ“Appropriate level of detail without oversimplification or fearmongering
βœ“Safety considerations and red-flag symptoms are highlighted
βœ“Cultural and regional context where relevant (Ayurveda, traditional remedies)
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How often we update content

Medical knowledge changes. A diabetes management approach considered standard in 2015 may have been replaced by newer evidence by 2025. We update content in three scenarios:

  • Major guideline change: When organisations like WHO, AHA, or IDF release updated guidelines, affected articles are reviewed and updated within 60 days
  • New significant research: When peer-reviewed studies materially change what we know about a topic, articles are revised
  • Routine review: Every article is reviewed by the original reviewer (or a current specialist) at least once every 18 months

Each article displays the date it was last medically reviewed. If the reviewed date is more than 18 months old, treat the article as requiring verification with a current source before relying on it for decisions.

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Editorial independence

Our editorial decisions are made independently of any commercial relationship. This means:

  • Advertisers do not influence which topics we cover or how we cover them
  • Affiliate relationships do not influence product recommendations or comparisons
  • Sponsored content, when published, is clearly labelled and still subject to medical review
  • Our medical reviewers are not compensated based on commercial performance of articles
  • We do not accept payment in exchange for favourable coverage of any product, drug, or service

See our full Advertising and Affiliate Disclosure for complete details on how we earn revenue.

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Corrections and feedback

We take accuracy seriously. If you spot an error, outdated information, or a claim that doesn't match current evidence, please tell us. Email info@247healthcare.blog with the article URL and the specific concern.

Significant corrections are made promptly, and where appropriate, a "Last updated" date is amended on the article. Minor typo fixes are made without notification. We aim to acknowledge correction requests within 48 hours.

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What we will not publish

To maintain trust, certain types of content will never appear on 247 Healthcare:

  • Miracle cures, guaranteed weight loss claims, or "doctors hate this trick" style content
  • Anti-vaccine misinformation or content rejecting established public health consensus
  • Promotion of unverified alternative treatments as substitutes for evidence-based care
  • Content that shames specific body types, eating patterns, or lifestyle choices
  • Articles that promise specific outcomes that depend on individual medical circumstances
  • Content sponsored by tobacco, alcohol marketing campaigns, or predatory health products
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Want to suggest a topic or report an issue?
Email info@247healthcare.blog and our editorial team will get back to you within 2 business days.

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