Corrections Policy
NextFitLife is committed to accuracy, transparency, and reader trust. Health information can affect real-life decisions, so we take corrections seriously.
If we discover that an article contains an error, outdated information, unclear wording, or a claim that needs stronger support, we review the issue and update the article when appropriate.
What We Correct
We may correct or update content for reasons including:
- Incorrect medical or health information
- Outdated guidance or changed medical recommendations
- Unsupported or unclear health claims
- Broken or outdated source links
- Missing safety warnings
- Typographical or grammatical errors that affect clarity
- Incorrect author, reviewer, or update information
- Reader feedback that identifies a genuine issue
How Readers Can Report an Error
If you believe an article needs correction, please contact us with the following information:
- The article URL
- The exact sentence, section, or claim you believe is incorrect
- A brief explanation of the issue
- A credible source, guideline, or reference, if available
You can send correction requests through the Contact page or by emailing Adelgalal775@gmail.com.
How We Review Correction Requests
When we receive a correction request, we review the article, compare the claim against reliable sources, and decide whether an update is needed.
For health and medical topics, we prioritize authoritative sources such as CDC, NIH, MedlinePlus, WHO, NHS, Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, major medical associations, and peer-reviewed research.
Types of Updates We May Make
Depending on the issue, we may:
- Correct, inaccurate wording
- Add missing context or safety warnings
- Replace outdated information with current guidance
- Add or improve source references
- Clarify that evidence is limited, mixed, or still developing
- Remove claims that are not adequately supported
- Update the article’s “last updated” date
Major vs. Minor Corrections
Minor corrections include spelling, grammar, formatting, broken links, or small wording improvements that do not change the meaning of the article.
Major corrections include changes to medical advice, safety information, risk explanation, source interpretation, or claims that could affect a reader’s health decision.
When a major correction is made, we aim to make the updated article clearer and safer for readers.
Our Commitment
We do not intentionally publish misleading health information. We also understand that medical evidence can change over time. Our correction process exists to keep NextFitLife useful, accurate, and transparent.
Contact for Corrections
To report an error, please email Adelgalal775@gmail.com with the article URL and details of the correction request.
