Transparency & Standards
Editorial Policy
How ClinicaliQ selects, reviews, and publishes clinical content.
Editorial Independence
ClinicaliQ maintains strict editorial independence. All clinical content is selected and reviewed based solely on relevance and quality — never on commercial relationships. Sponsors and advertisers have no influence over which guidelines are published, how they are summarised, or what clinical conclusions are drawn.
Content Sources
All clinical content on ClinicaliQ is sourced directly from authoritative bodies:
- ●NICE — National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
- ●MHRA — Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
- ●NHS England — National clinical frameworks and commissioning guidance
- ●SIGN — Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network
- ●ClinicalTrials.gov / ISRCTN — Trial registries
- ●BMJ, The Lancet, NEJM — Peer-reviewed journals
AI-Assisted Content
ClinicaliQ uses AI to generate guideline summaries, webinar scripts, and content digests. All AI-generated content is:
- ●Grounded in the cited source guideline
- ●Reviewed by Dr Anzal Qurbain before publication
- ●Clearly labelled where AI assistance was used
- ●Not a substitute for the original source document
Sponsored Content
Sponsored content on ClinicaliQ is subject to the following rules:
- ●Clearly labelled as "Sponsored" throughout
- ●Reviewed for ABPI Code of Practice compliance before publication
- ●Sponsors are acknowledged but do not influence clinical content
- ●Promotional claims must reference published evidence
Corrections Policy
Factual errors are corrected promptly. If you identify an error in our content, please contact
[email protected]. We will review and correct substantive errors within 24 hours. Corrections are noted on the relevant article.
Staleness & Currency
All guidelines are date-stamped with their original publication date. Guidelines older than 12 months display an amber warning; those older than 18 months display a red warning. This does not mean the guideline is incorrect — many guidelines remain current — but it prompts users to verify currency against the source body's website.