Trust & safety
Clear boundaries before cute medical content does something stupid.
MJJ uses visible guardrails for medical boundaries, red flags, evidence quality, and publication approval. The point is not to remove uncertainty. The point is to stop hiding it.
Medical boundaries
MJJ does not provide personal advice.
- No diagnosis, triage, or individualized treatment plans.
- No medication start/stop/change instructions.
- No exercise prescription for a specific person.
- No emergency handling through forms, comments, or content.
Red flags
Escalation language is mandatory.
Content touching falls, confusion, hallucinations, fever, new weakness, chest pain, medication emergencies, suicidality, or sudden severe decline must include urgent-care/clinician escalation language.
Evidence labels
Every claim should show what kind of evidence is underneath it.
Abstract-only or unverified sources should not become strong public claims. They can point to evidence needs, not certainty. Annoying? Yes. Necessary? Also yes.
Publication checklist
Audience is defined: patient/caregiver, clinician/researcher, or builder.
Claims are matched to evidence quality labels.
Limitations and uncertainty are visible.
No individualized diagnosis, treatment, medication, or exercise instruction slipped in.
Red-flag topics include escalation language.
References/DOIs/PMIDs have been checked when scientific claims depend on them.
Marcel gives final approval before public export or posting.