The policies that govern how the site operates.
This page gathers the legal, disclosure, and standards documents that explain how the site handles privacy, liability, commercial links, and editorial decisions.
The legal center should explain the operating system around the site.
Readers should be able to trace privacy, liability, affiliate behavior, and editorial standards without hunting through disconnected boilerplate.
Start with the policy that matches the exact question instead of scanning all of them.
Use the linked trust pages to understand how legal rules intersect with editorial behavior.
If the policy language fails to explain the real workflow, treat it as a documentation defect.
Health content works better when the rules are easy to inspect. These pages exist so readers, partners, and reviewers can see how the site handles commercial relationships, user data, and risk-sensitive content.
If a policy feels incomplete, use the contact page and say which policy section needs clarification.
Start with the page that matches the question you actually have.
What data is collected and why
Covers newsletter submissions, admin cookies, operational logs, and the small amount of personal data needed to run the site.
Rules for using the site
Covers acceptable use, intellectual property, third-party links, warranties, and limitation of liability.
How affiliate links are handled
Explains how commercial links appear on pages, how commissions work, and why editorial/product logic must stay visible.
Limits of the site's health content
Clarifies that articles do not replace diagnosis, treatment, or emergency care, especially on YMYL topics.
How content is sourced and maintained
Use the editorial policy, sourcing standards, and corrections workflow to see how pages are built and corrected.
The legal center should answer practical questions, not just store boilerplate.
Most readers do not need every policy. They need the right one for the problem in front of them.
You want to know if a product link is commercial
Start with the affiliate disclosure. It explains how affiliate links are used and why they must remain separate from the educational core of a page.
You want to understand whether a page is medical advice
Use the medical disclaimer first. Then read the editorial policy if the question is really about how claims are framed and sourced.
You need to report a factual or policy issue
Use the corrections policy and contact page together so the team can route the report correctly and tie it back to the affected page.
Need the human explanation too?
The About page and editorial policy explain how these rules connect to the way pages are actually produced.