About

Editorial and commercial policy

GLP1 Tablets covers a niche where readers can easily confuse research, regulation, brand shorthand, and treatment access. This policy explains the working rule behind the site: editorial content must stay useful and accurate on its own, while any commercial layer must stay secondary, clearly labelled, and tightly limited.

Editorial rule

Answer the question first

Pages should explain the medicine, route, approval status, or evidence clearly before they introduce any next-step pathway.

Commercial rule

Use quiet, useful handoff only

If a page includes a commercial route later on, it should look like a calm next step for a reader who wants options, not a disguised sales pitch.

Trust rule

Keep high-stakes pages clean

Research, safety, governance, pregnancy, and methodology content should not be shaped around partner demand.

What is allowed and what is not allowed

A health-information site usually loses trust when readers cannot tell whether a page exists to teach them or to move them. These boundaries are here to keep that line visible.

Area Allowed Not allowed
Availability and approval pages A clearly separated next-step block after the explanation, usually linking to a neutral pathways or comparison resource. Turning a UK status answer into a provider push, or blurring current UK availability with future or U.S. developments.
Comparison content Explaining route, molecule, indication, evidence, and practical differences in plain English. Ranking by payout, omitting downsides, or using “best” language that the evidence does not support.
Research, safety, and governance pages Pure information, source framing, and reader guidance. Commercial calls to action, provider nudges, or partnership-led emphasis.
News and update posts Explaining what changed, what did not change, and why a headline matters in the UK context. Using news as a way to imply urgency, availability, or suitability that the story does not justify.
Commercial relationships Tracked-link or controlled referral arrangements with clear disclosure. Opaque promotion, coupon-style clutter, or letting a partner control claims, rankings, or editorial framing.
How pages are supposed to read

A visitor should be able to trust the opening section

The first screen on a medical-information page should usually settle the main question directly. That matters here because many visitors arrive with brand confusion, U.S.-vs-UK confusion, or uncertainty about whether “pill” means “available now”.

A strong opening should therefore tell readers the answer quickly, then widen into nuance. It should not bury the answer under teaser language, generic conversion copy, or vague provider framing.

How commercial links should appear

Commercial routes belong later and should stay calm

If a reader has finished the explanation and wants to explore regulated options, a restrained next-step block can be reasonable. The wording should sound like “compare regulated UK treatment pathways” rather than “best deal”, “claim offer”, or “buy now”.

Why this matters:Prescription and weight-management content loses credibility fast when commercial urgency starts to sound more confident than the evidence.
Related pages

Use these pages to see how the policy works in practice

The best test of a policy is whether it matches the public pages. Readers who want the disclosure language, the neutral treatment-pathway layer, or the editorial contact route can use the links below.