Editorial principles
- Calm over alarm. Catastrophizing is not safer; it is just louder. Where escalation is warranted, we are direct. Where it is not, we name that too.
- Action over abstraction. Every page ends in usable next steps, not a wall of caveats.
- No diagnosis. BioShield AI does not name specific illnesses for individuals. Diagnostic claims belong to clinicians who can examine, order labs, and take responsibility.
- Vulnerability-aware. Infants, older adults, pregnancy, immunocompromised individuals, and chronic-disease patients are explicitly weighed.
- Plain language. Jargon hides uncertainty. We write the way an unhurried clinician would explain something to a friend.
Sourcing
BioShield AI's content is grounded in widely accepted public-health and clinical-education sources, including the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, the National Institutes of Health, major academic medical centers, professional society guidance (American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Emergency Physicians, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists), and standard clinical references.
We do not invent thresholds. Where a threshold appears in our guidance — fever cutoffs, watch windows, hydration markers — it reflects mainstream clinical guidance simplified for non-clinician readers. Where guidance is contested or evolving, we say so.
What we will not do
- Promote unproven supplements, fringe protocols, or product brands.
- Frame symptoms in a way that maximizes anxiety to drive clicks.
- Allow advertisers, sponsors, or affiliates to influence escalation criteria, risk framings, or specific guidance.
- Replace your relationship with a clinician.
Use of AI
BioShield AI uses large language models to help users frame their situation in real time. AI outputs are guided by structured prompts, conservative defaults, and explicit red-flag rules. We treat AI as a calibrated reasoning aid, not as an authority. If a model output appears to conflict with mainstream clinical guidance, we update the prompt or content rather than defending the model.
Conflicts of interest
BioShield AI may be supported by display advertising and affiliate referrals to vetted preparedness products. Editorial content and AI risk framings are independent of revenue sources. No advertiser or affiliate has influence over what symptoms warrant escalation, what tier a situation receives, or what we recommend.
Corrections and updates
If you find an error in our content — outdated guidance, factual mistake, ambiguous threshold — email contact@bioshieldai.org with subject "Editorial correction", the page URL, and a short description. Corrections are reviewed against current public-health guidance and updated where warranted.
Review cycle
High-impact pages — symptom thresholds, urgent-care criteria, emergency warning signs — are reviewed at least annually and after any major guidance change from the CDC, WHO, or relevant professional societies. Page-level review dates are tracked internally and reflected in updates over time.
See the principles applied.
Our hub pages and AI guide are where the editorial stance becomes concrete.
Symptom Hub →Related: About · AI Limits · Medical Disclaimer.