Glone does not offer personal medical advice. For higher-risk topics such as dosing schedules, side effects, contraindication language, and safety warnings, we apply a source-review workflow before updates are published.
What gets reviewed
Articles covering dosing, dose-escalation schedules, common side effects, missed-dose rules, and medication comparisons receive an additional review pass focused on factual consistency with public-source references.
How we frame higher-risk content
Higher-risk topics are written to stay factual, non-prescriptive, and clear about their limits. We explain what is commonly reported, what public labels and trials say, and when someone should pause and contact a healthcare provider instead of self-adjusting a plan.
What that review checks
The review process checks whether factual claims match public prescribing information, clinical trial publications, and reputable medical references. It also checks whether wording stays non-prescriptive and clearly signals when a reader should contact a clinician.
What the review does not do
Source review does not create a doctor-patient relationship, replace individualized medical advice, or authorize personal treatment decisions. If you need medication guidance tailored to your own health situation, speak with your healthcare provider.