How Dela reviews health content
Health content standards · Updated July 12, 2026
Every Dela Learn guide is medically verified before publication. Editorial ownership remains with Sbantu LLC. Medical verification checks factual accuracy, safety framing and whether the guide reflects the cited clinical sources.
Sources come first
Dela gives priority to current guidance and patient education from recognized clinical and public health organizations. Sources are linked directly from each guide so readers can review the original context.
Depending on the topic, sources may include the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and the National Institutes of Health Office of Dietary Supplements.
What medical verification checks
- Health claims match the cited source and keep important limits or uncertainty.
- Experiences that vary from person to person are not presented as universal outcomes.
- Estimates are clearly separated from measurements, diagnoses and clinical care.
- Urgent concerns and decisions about treatment are directed to qualified care.
What verification does not mean
Medical verification does not turn Dela into a medical device and does not make a guide personal medical advice. Dela cannot assess symptoms, diagnose a condition, provide contraception or replace prenatal, fertility or emergency care.
Corrections and updates
Dela corrects a guide when a cited source changes, when a claim needs clearer context, or when an editorial review finds language that is too certain. Dela records each guide's latest review date in its publication metadata. Questions about a source or correction can be sent to [email protected].