Sources and context
Mental health materials separate general educational information from medical advice and avoid overstating certainty.
Updated April 10, 2026
This page describes how we prepare public materials: articles, psychological test descriptions, practice explanations, and service safety text.
Mental health materials separate general educational information from medical advice and avoid overstating certainty.
Texts should help people understand their state without fear, stigma, or promises of guaranteed outcomes.
Materials may be updated when the product, sources, legal requirements, or public page format changes.
We clearly state that the service does not diagnose, treat, or replace doctors, therapists, or emergency care.
Content is created for educational and supportive navigation: to explain a state, offer gentle self-help steps, and indicate when professional help may be important.
For tests, we describe them as self-assessment tools and include limitations so results are not treated as diagnoses.
When materials are updated, priority goes to topics where misunderstanding may create higher risk, including anxiety, depression, panic attacks, PTSD, self-harm, violence, and crisis states.
Primarily in the blog, psychological test catalog, public product descriptions, and legally sensitive explanations.