Editorial standards

Health education should earn trust.

This site is built to make health information easier to question, not easier to oversimplify.

An editorial illustration of health sources, a magnifying glass, and a compass

How information is approached

Sources, context, and clear boundaries.

Health information is more useful when readers can see what it explains, what it cannot answer, and when a personal healthcare conversation is needed.

Explore trusted public resources
01

Real-world nursing perspective

Anthony Colón, RN brings more than 25 years of healthcare experience to the topics discussed here. That perspective informs the questions he raises, but it does not replace an individual clinical evaluation.

02

Education, not medical care

This website does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or a nurse-patient relationship. Decisions about medicine, nutrition, exercise, and telehealth should be made with a qualified licensed healthcare professional.

03

Transparent sources

When the site points readers beyond Anthony’s own educational material, it favors public resources from organizations such as the FDA, NIH, NIDDK, and the National Library of Medicine.

04

Claims with context

Personal experience can be meaningful, but it is not a promise. Individual results vary, and health information should be understood in the context of each person’s medical history and goals.

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