Report a Correction

Report a correction using the form below so our clinicians can verify the issue and publish a fast, accurate update. Whether it’s a factual mistake, outdated guidance, a broken reference, or unclear wording, your feedback helps us keep MyMedicineAdvisor doctor-reviewed, evidence-based, and up to date.

Why this page exists

We’re committed to accurate, evidence-based, doctor-reviewed health information. If you spot an error, outdated statement, unclear wording, or a broken link, tell us here—we review and update quickly.

What we’ll do after you report a correction

  • Triage (same business day): we classify the issue’s severity and assign a reviewer.
  • Evidence check: our editors confirm with authoritative references.
  • Clinical review: a licensed clinician signs off on medical changes.
  • Publish update: the page is updated; significant changes include a visible Update note.
  • Notify you (optional): if you leave an email, we’ll confirm the outcome or ask for details.

What to include when you report a correction

  • Page URL and quoted text to update
  • The corrected wording you suggest
  • Source links (guidelines, drug labels, peer-reviewed studies)
  • Your name and email (optional, for follow-up)

Acceptable sources (examples)

  • Clinical guidelines: WHO, CDC, NICE, ICMR, specialty societies
  • Drug information: FDA/EMA labels, DailyMed, national formularies
  • Peer-reviewed evidence: PubMed/Cochrane (systematic reviews preferred)
    We avoid unsourced claims and predatory journals.

What you can report

  • Factual errors (figures, symptoms, contraindications, interactions)
  • Outdated guidance or dosing info
  • Broken/incorrect references or links
  • Typos that alter meaning or clarity
  • Missing context or safety warnings

Not for emergencies. If you need urgent care, call your local emergency number (e.g., 112 in India, 911 in the U.S., 999 in the U.K.) or visit the nearest hospital.


How we process corrections

  1. Triage (same business day): classify severity, assign reviewer.
  2. Verification: check sources (guidelines, labels, peer-reviewed studies).
  3. Clinical review: licensed clinician confirms changes.
  4. Update & annotate: page updated with “Last updated” note; major changes summarized.
  5. Notify submitter (if email provided).

Typical timelines

  • Critical safety issues: under 24 hours
  • Standard content fixes: 1–3 business days
  • Complex reviews requiring guideline changes: up to 7 business days

What to include (to speed things up)

  • The page URL and quoted text you’re correcting
  • The correct information you propose
  • Source links (guidelines, drug labels, peer-reviewed studies)
  • Your name and email (optional but helps us follow up)


What we won’t do

  • Provide personalized medical advice
  • Change clinical content without reliable sources
  • Remove accurate, properly sourced information

Transparency & updates


Privacy

We use your submission only to investigate and respond to the reported issue. See Privacy Policy.