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Editorial standards

SafeMama Editorial Policy

SafeMama publishes educational pregnancy safety content to help users prepare better questions for clinicians and pharmacists. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, emergency guidance, or a treatment plan.

What we cover

SafeMama covers pregnancy safety questions about food, medicines, skincare ingredients, supplements, beauty products, household product labels, and product-scanning workflows. Our content is written for general education and search discovery, not for personalized clinical decisions.

How sources are selected

We prioritize primary and authority sources over blogs or unsupported claims. Common sources include the FDA medicine and pregnancy guidance, NHS medicines in pregnancy guidance, CDC medicine and pregnancy resources, MotherToBaby fact sheets, LactMed when breastfeeding is relevant, national health agencies, product labels, and peer-reviewed or clinical references where appropriate.

How content is written

Each pregnancy safety guide is designed to answer the search intent directly, explain what to check first, highlight source-backed cautions, point to safer alternatives only when reliable sources support them, and remind readers when to ask a clinician or pharmacist.

We avoid fabricated reviews, fake awards, fake rankings, unsupported best claims, invented endorsements, and keyword stuffing.

Medical boundaries

SafeMama does not provide personalized diagnosis, prescription dosing, emergency triage, or treatment plans. Readers should ask an obstetrician, midwife, pharmacist, or qualified clinician before starting, stopping, or changing medicines or supplements, and whenever they have symptoms, a high-risk pregnancy, allergies, chronic conditions, conflicting advice, or uncertainty about a product label.

AI and app limits

SafeMama uses technology to help scan product labels and summarize published guidance, but the app is not a medical device, not clinically certified, and not a replacement for professional care. AI-generated explanations can miss context, outdated labels, country-specific rules, or individual risk factors.

Corrections and updates

We review and update pages when source guidance changes, new evidence becomes available, a user reports a possible error, or a page needs clearer medical boundaries. To report an issue, email contact@safemama.co with the page URL and the source you believe should be reviewed.

Last updated: July 9, 2026

Frequently asked questions

Does SafeMama provide medical advice?

No. SafeMama publishes educational pregnancy safety content and product-label explanations. It does not provide diagnosis, prescription dosing, emergency triage, or treatment plans.

Which sources does SafeMama prefer?

SafeMama prioritizes authority and primary sources such as FDA, NHS, CDC, MotherToBaby, LactMed, national health agencies, product labels, and clinical references when relevant.