Trust Centre / Evidence policy

Evidence policy

We prioritise credible public-health and peer‑reviewed sources and review them regularly. This policy explains how sources are selected and maintained.

Last reviewed:16 Jan 2026Next review due:16 Apr 2026

We review evidence regularly to keep guidance current and appropriate for educational use.

What “evidence‑informed” means here

We use evidence to shape educational guidance and practical routines. We do not make clinical claims or offer medical advice.

Acceptable source tiers

  • Tier A: Official public health bodies and national guidance.
  • Tier B: Peer‑reviewed journals, systematic reviews, and consensus statements.
  • Tier C: Reputable charities and education authorities with transparent standards.

What we avoid

  • Miracle cures, sensational claims, or unverified advice.
  • Diagnosis or treatment instructions.
  • Sources that cannot be independently verified.

How we review and update

  • Evidence is reviewed on a rolling cadence for core wellbeing guidance.
  • Each page shows a “last reviewed” date and review‑due window.
  • If evidence conflicts, we prioritise high‑quality reviews and official guidance.
  • When uncertainty remains, we present information cautiously.

Medical disclaimer

NeuroBreath provides educational information only. It is not a substitute for professional medical, psychological, or educational care.

Example citations

Sources are copy‑only for transparency — external links are not clickable.

  • CDC: Stress and coping

    https://www.cdc.gov/mentalhealth/stress-coping/index.html

  • NIMH: ADHD overview

    https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder-adhd

  • US Department of Education: IDEA

    https://sites.ed.gov/idea/

Evidence policy | NeuroBreath