How guidance is built

Editorial Policy

How SafetySeason chooses sources, writes general safety guidance, and keeps health-safety boundaries visible.

General education only.SafetySeason is not medical advice, emergency dispatch, rescue training, or a substitute for local authorities and official instructions.
Maintained by
SafetySeason editorial maintainer
Last updated
2026-07-04
Review cadence
Review priority is safety-critical changes first, then source freshness and wording clarity.
Corrections
Use Contact SafetySeason with the page URL, sentence, source, and reason for review.

Source selection

Guides are framed from official and institutional references such as Ready.gov, CDC, National Weather Service, National Park Service, NHTSA, EPA, NIOSH, Poison Control, and comparable safety organizations.

Each article keeps source-linked claims, a local-alert priority, a do-not-do boundary, and a get-help-now trigger.

Review rhythm

Pages are reviewed when a source breaks, a safety boundary needs clarification, a reader flags a problem, or a new local/domain launch checklist requires another pass.

The site does not publish doctor-reviewed labels, expert badges, or emergency certifications unless those reviews actually exist and can be named.

Health-safety boundary

Health-adjacent pages are written as plain-language education. They avoid diagnosis, dosage, treatment promises, or instructions that should come from clinicians or emergency responders.

If a symptom, exposure, injury, poisoning concern, missing person, evacuation order, or active hazard is present, the page tells the reader to stop using a general checklist and seek the right authority.