Editorial Review Standards

Last updated: January 1, 2026.

These standards describe how Well Women reviews content before and after publication. They work alongside our Editorial Policy and Content Integrity commitments.

Our editorial lens

Every article on Well Women is written through a lifestyle and natural-habits lens. We cover everyday food, movement, sleep, stress, comfort, and community. We do not publish medical, pharmaceutical, or diagnostic content, and we do not recommend medications, supplements for specific conditions, dosages, tests, or treatment plans.

Pre-publication review

Before an article is published, an editor checks that it: is written in clear, plain language; frames topics as general wellness education rather than personal advice; avoids fear-based or sensational claims; and stays within our lifestyle-only scope. Articles that touch on living well with a common health topic are reviewed to confirm they focus on comfort and daily habits, not clinical guidance.

What we screen out

  • Named medications, drug or supplement products, dosages, or usage instructions;
  • Diagnostic decision-trees, symptom-checker logic, or “you may have X” framing;
  • Claims to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition;
  • Before/after outcome promises about weight, body, appearance, or health;
  • Content directed at children.

Accuracy and tone

We aim to keep summaries faithful to mainstream consensus, and we avoid overstating the strength of any idea. Our tone is warm, inclusive, and respectful of a reader’s body, background, and choices.

Post-publication review

We periodically revisit articles to keep them current. Reader reports submitted through our Report an Inaccuracy form are reviewed by an editor. When a material change is warranted, we update the article and note the correction.

Accountability

Editorial decisions are made independently of advertising and commercial teams. Questions about our standards can be sent to info@womeninweb3paris.com.