Sourcing and Citations
Our Evidence Hierarchy
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Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of clinical trials
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Randomized and non-randomized clinical trials
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Observational human studies
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Authoritative monographs and pharmacopoeias
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Mechanistic/preclinical evidence (in vitro, animal), labeled as such
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Traditional/ethnobotanical sources, clearly attributed
Inclusion & Appraisal
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We favor studies with transparent methods, adequate sample size, and clinically relevant outcomes.
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We summarize limitations (e.g., small N, surrogate endpoints, risk of bias).
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When evidence conflicts, we present both sides and explain which findings carry more weight.
Citations on the Site
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Each Materia page lists key references and, when available, links to DOIs or PubMed.
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We paraphrase carefully and use quotation marks for verbatim text.
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Retractions/expressions of concern are monitored; affected pages are updated with notices.
Suggested in-page style: Vancouver/AMA-like references (numbered) with DOI or PubMed link when available.
Example (on an herb page):
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Smith AB, Doe C. Title. Journal. 2023;12(3):100-110. doi:10.1234/abcd.efgh
Traditional Knowledge
When describing traditional uses, we attribute the source (e.g., text, materia medica tradition, cultural lineage) and avoid implying clinical efficacy unless supported by human data.
Image & Illustration Policy
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Botanical plates: custom, copyright-safe (public domain/CC0 or original).
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Stock images: licensed for web use with attribution if required.
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We avoid images that imply health outcomes not supported by evidence.
Data Availability
When possible, we link to open-access versions of studies and note when access is restricted.
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