Clinical Review Policy

Review standards for higher-risk guidance

Mom AI Agent is not a medical practice. This policy explains how higher-risk content is handled on the public evidence hub, where review standards tighten, and when the platform should defer to a licensed care team.

Educational by default

Most website content is educational, source-linked, and designed to help families understand public guidance. It is not individualized medical advice.

Higher-risk topics receive tighter controls

Topics involving fever, dehydration, allergy reactions, breathing concerns, postpartum warning signs, and age-specific safety thresholds are handled with stricter language and clearer escalation prompts.

Source hierarchy matters

For higher-stakes content, public-health agencies, pediatric associations, and national guidance bodies are prioritized over general educational sources.

Escalation beats overconfidence

When the platform cannot safely narrow a decision, it should direct the user toward their pediatrician, OB team, nurse line, or urgent care instead of sounding certain.

When content should escalate

  • Newborn or young-infant symptoms that may require same-day medical evaluation.
  • Possible allergic reactions, respiratory concerns, dehydration, or emergency safety issues.
  • Postpartum symptoms that may signal hemorrhage, infection, blood pressure complications, or severe mood changes.
  • Cases where age, region, feeding history, or medical background materially change the safest next step.

Current boundary

The public platform can explain guidance, organize next steps, and surface red flags. It does not diagnose, prescribe, interpret medical tests, or replace a clinician who knows the user and child.

Trust Center

Review source standards

Methodology

See how answers are assembled

Disclaimer

View use boundaries