True Precision Medical

Editorial standards

How we write, source, and stand behind the information in our patient resource library.

How our content is created

Our patient resources are written by the True Precision Medical Team — our in-house editorial staff — to explain conditions and treatment options in plain, honest language. Articles are educational; they are not a substitute for a consultation, diagnosis, or personalized medical advice.

Our sourcing standards

Every clinical claim is grounded in primary, authoritative sources: peer-reviewed medical journals, professional-society guidelines and position statements (for example the Society of Interventional Radiology, ACOG, the AHA/ACC, ASCO, and the American Academy of Neurology), Cochrane reviews, and government/academic resources such as the FDA and the NIH/PubMed.

We do not cite other clinics, marketing pages, or news articles as evidence. Where the research for a treatment is still emerging or limited, we say so plainly rather than overstating it.

The role of our specialists

Where an article names a physician, it identifies a specialist who performs the treatments discussed here at True Precision Medical. That is a statement about who provides the care — not a claim that the physician authored or medically reviewed the article.

Our specialists are fellowship-trained and board-certified in their fields, and any treatment decision is made with you directly, based on your history, imaging, and goals.

Accuracy, updates, and corrections

Medicine evolves, and so do these resources. We revise articles as guidance and evidence change. If you believe something is inaccurate or out of date, we want to know — please contact us and we will review it.