Health information can help people understand a concern more clearly. It can also do harm when it is vague, exaggerated, oversimplified, or presented with more certainty than it deserves. This policy explains how Beshi Khushi reviews health and medical-context content before publication, how we maintain boundaries around that content, and what users can expect from us when accuracy, safety, and responsible publishing matter.
Beshi Khushi works in a sensitive space. Sexual wellness content affects private decisions, personal confidence, and, in some cases, whether someone seeks proper care. That is why we do not treat health content as filler, marketing decoration, or something to publish casually. It is reviewed with care, written in plain language, and kept within clear educational limits.
Beshi Khushi provides health information for general education and awareness only. We do not provide diagnosis, prescriptions, treatment plans, emergency guidance, or personal medical advice.
Our content is meant to help users better understand sexual wellness, intimate care, and related health topics. It is not a replacement for medical assessment by a qualified professional. Where someone may need clinical evaluation, urgent care, or individual treatment, our content should not be treated as the final answer.
This matters even more in sexual health, where symptoms may have different causes and where embarrassment, confusion, or misinformation can delay proper care. Good education can support better decisions. It cannot replace diagnosis.
This policy applies to health-related and medical-context content published by Beshi Khushi, including content that explains sexual health topics, body-related concerns, wellbeing issues, safety considerations, and general health decision-support information.
This may include:
User-generated content, including reviews and similar submissions, is governed separately under the relevant moderation and review policies.
The purpose of medical content review at Beshi Khushi is simple: to reduce misinformation risk and publish health information that is responsible, understandable, and safe in context.
We do not review content to make it sound more dramatic, more technical, or more persuasive. We review it to make sure it is accurate enough to publish, careful enough for a general audience, and clear about what it can and cannot do.
That review considers whether content:
Health and medical-context content is reviewed against a consistent set of standards before publication and during later updates.
Accuracy
Core definitions, explanations, and safety-related statements should align with credible sources and accepted understanding at the time of review. We do not knowingly publish invented claims, careless interpretations, or medical-sounding statements that go beyond what the evidence can reasonably support.
Where a topic involves uncertainty, variation, or limits, the content should reflect that honestly.
Safety
Health content must not encourage unsafe self-diagnosis, unsafe self-treatment, false reassurance, or avoidable delay in seeking proper care. It must not frame a product, tip, or general suggestion as a guaranteed answer to a health concern.
When a topic may require professional assessment, that boundary should be made clear.
Clarity
People should not need specialist training to understand what a page is saying. Health content should be readable, well-structured, and plain enough for a general audience without becoming careless or misleading.
In sexual wellness, clarity is not just a writing preference. It is part of safe communication. Users often arrive with hesitation, misinformation, or fear. Confusing language only makes that worse.
Neutrality
Health information should be informative, not theatrical. We avoid sensational wording, fear-based framing, and exaggerated certainty. We also avoid turning educational pages into disguised sales pages.
A user should be able to read our health content and understand the issue more clearly, not feel pushed toward a purchase.
Respect and Discretion
Sexual wellness content must be written with maturity and respect. That means avoiding crude language, shame-based framing, and sensational phrasing. It also means treating private health concerns as exactly that: private health concerns, not clickbait.
We want users to feel informed, not exposed.
Where we rely on external medical, scientific, or health-related sources, those sources are selected with care. Source quality matters, but source handling matters too. A strong source can still be used badly if it is taken out of context, overstated, or stretched to support claims it does not actually support.
For that reason, review is not limited to checking whether a reference exists. It also considers whether the reference is relevant, whether the wording matches what the source actually supports, and whether the claim stays within reasonable limits.
Our broader standards on source selection, evidence use, and reference handling are set out in our Sources & References Policy.
To protect users and maintain responsible YMYL boundaries, Beshi Khushi does not publish:
This boundary is intentional. It is not there to sound careful. It is there because public education and medical care are not the same thing.
Some Beshi Khushi pages may discuss products near health-related information. When that happens, the health context must remain educational and appropriately limited.
Products are not presented as substitutes for diagnosis, treatment, or professional care. We do not describe products as guaranteed solutions to sexual health concerns, and we do not present commercial content as though it carries the weight of medical advice.
Where product information and health information appear close together, the distinction should still remain clear. Users should be able to tell what is educational, what is commercial, and where the boundaries are.
Our broader standards on commercial neutrality are addressed in our Conflict of Interest and Commercial Neutrality policy.
This policy explains the standards health information must meet. It does not set out every internal step of drafting, editing, reviewing, correcting, or updating content.
Those workflow details are covered in our Editorial Process & Review Methodology. In other words, this page explains the standard we hold health content to. Our editorial policy explains how that work is carried out in practice.
Health information should not be left untouched simply because it was once reviewed. Some content needs revision over time because accepted understanding changes, wording becomes outdated, a page is too easy to misread, or a reader raises a legitimate concern.
We review and update health content when:
When updates are made, the revised content is expected to meet the same standards as new content.
Users may report concerns about the accuracy, safety, sourcing, clarity, tone, or boundaries of health-related content published on Beshi Khushi.
We take those concerns seriously. Not every report will lead to a change, but each concern should be reviewed properly rather than brushed aside. Depending on the issue, that may result in clarification, correction, revision, or removal.
For content concerns, please use the process described in our Corrections & Feedback Policy.
This policy forms part of the Beshi Khushi Trust & Safety framework. Its purpose is to make our responsibilities clear, not vague.
Users should be able to understand what our health content is for, what it is not for, how it is reviewed, and where to raise concerns if something appears wrong, unclear, or unsafe. That is part of responsible publishing. It is also part of earning trust in a category where users often need discretion, clarity, and a serious standard of care in how information is handled.
If you want to report a concern about the accuracy, safety, interpretation, or limits of any health-related content on Beshi Khushi, please contact us through our support channels.
This page is maintained as part of Beshi Khushi’s Trust & Safety system and is reviewed periodically to keep the policy clear, current, and operational.