Our Editorial Policy
CureNatural publishes educational content about Ayurveda, digestion, daily routine (dinacharya), lifestyle practices, and metabolic balance. Our goal is to make traditional concepts understandable, practical, and safe to apply in modern life.
This policy explains how we create, review, update, and correct content.
Last Updated: February 10, 2026
1) What Our Content Is For
CureNatural content is designed to support education and informed wellness decisions. We publish:
Explanations of Ayurvedic principles in plain English
Practical food and lifestyle guidance
Guidance for building consistent routines
Context on safety considerations and when to seek medical advice
What Our Content Is Not
Our articles are not a substitute for individualized medical care. We do not provide:
Personal diagnosis or treatment plans through public articles
Emergency advice
Guarantees of outcomes
If you have symptoms that are severe, persistent, or worsening, or if you have complex medical conditions, consult a licensed clinician.
2) Who Creates Our Content
CureNatural content is written and curated by credentialed practitioners and reviewed to maintain clarity and safety.
Primary reviewer and responsible editor: Dr. Amit K. Gupta, MD (Founder & Medical Director)
[Link to /dr-amit-gupta-md/]
When other contributors are involved, we publish their name and relevant credentials on the article.
3) Our Editorial Principles
We aim for content that is:
Accurate: Claims are supported by credible sources or clearly labeled as traditional theory/interpretation.
Clear: Written in plain, accessible language.
Useful: Focused on practical steps readers can apply.
Balanced: Ayurveda is presented as a complete framework, not a shortcut trend.
Safety-aware: We highlight common contraindications, interaction risks, and situations that warrant clinician input.
4) Sources and Evidence Standards
Ayurveda has classical foundations and a living clinical tradition. We use a “both/and” standard:
Authoritative Ayurveda sources may include
Classical concepts (doshas, guna/qualities, dinacharya, ritucharya, agni/digestion)
Traditional formulations and approaches presented as tradition (not as proven cures)
Modern evidence may include
Peer-reviewed research and reputable clinical references when discussing physiology, risk, safety, and outcomes
Safety and interaction considerations drawn from recognized pharmacology principles and clinical reasoning
How we write about evidence
We distinguish traditional Ayurvedic theory from modern scientific evidence.
We avoid overstating certainty when research is limited or mixed.
We prioritize safety and practicality over sensational claims.
We bridge Ayurveda and modern medicine with plain-English education, careful sourcing, and a safety-first approach—especially around herbs, supplements, and medications.
5) Medical Safety and “When to Ask Your Clinician”
We take a conservative approach to risk. Content that references herbs, supplements, cleansing practices, or intensive protocols includes safety context when relevant.
We pay special attention to:
Herb–drug interactions and medication safety
Pregnancy and breastfeeding
Children and older adults
Liver or kidney disease
Diabetes, heart disease, autoimmune disease, cancer care
Blood thinners, steroids, immunosuppressants, psychiatric medications
Surgery and perioperative risk
If you’re on medications, managing chronic illness, or under active medical care, you should consult your clinician before starting new herbs or supplements.
6) Editorial Review Process
Before publication, we aim to ensure content meets our standards for clarity, accuracy, and safety.
Depending on the topic, review may include:
Factual review for accuracy and internal consistency
Safety review (contraindications, interaction risk, inappropriate generalizations)
Readability edit (plain language, scannable structure)
Source checks for key statements
7) Updates, Revisions, and Content Audits
Health information changes. Our content is reviewed and updated as needed, including when:
New research changes the safety profile of a practice or supplement
We identify unclear wording that could be misapplied
Readers report errors or outdated references
Update transparency
When we make meaningful changes, we may:
Update the “Last updated” date
Add a short note describing what changed (for major revisions)
8) Corrections Policy
If we make a factual error, we correct it promptly.
To request a correction, contact us at: support [at] curenatural.com
Include:
The page URL
The specific statement you believe is incorrect
A credible source (if available)
9) Advertising, Sponsorship, and Affiliate Disclosure
CureNatural may promote its own courses and app. If we use affiliate links or sponsorships, we disclose that relationship clearly on the page.
Our editorial standards do not change based on commercial relationships. If a product or recommendation is mentioned, it must meet our safety and usefulness standards.
10) Conflicts of Interest
We disclose material conflicts when relevant. Editorial decisions are made to prioritize reader benefit, safety, and clarity.
11) Contact
Questions about our editorial standards can be sent to: support [at] curenatural.com
For general inquiries, visit: Contact us