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Editorial Standards

Last Reviewed: April 20, 2026

Addiction Helpline America is committed to publishing accurate, trustworthy, and compassionate information about addiction, treatment options, and recovery. The people who come to our website are often facing one of the hardest moments of their lives — or trying to help someone they love through it. They deserve content they can trust.

This page explains the standards we hold ourselves to when creating, reviewing, and updating everything we publish.

Our Editorial Pledge

Every piece of content on Addiction Helpline America is written with care, reviewed for accuracy, grounded in credible sources, and updated when the facts change. We prioritize clarity, safety, and respect for the people we serve over search rankings, ad revenue, or promotional interests.

Core Editorial Principles

Accuracy First Every factual claim is sourced from authoritative medical, government, or clinical research publications. We verify statistics before publishing and cite sources directly in our content.
Clinical Review Content covering treatment, medications, withdrawal, or clinical topics is reviewed by credentialed professionals in the behavioral health and addiction treatment field.
Compassionate Language We use person-first, non-stigmatizing language throughout our content. We follow SAMHSA and NIDA guidelines on respectful terminology around substance use.
Editorial Independence Our content is not influenced by advertisers, sponsors, or partner facilities. Treatment recommendations are based on evidence, not commercial relationships.
Transparency We clearly disclose when content has been reviewed, when it was last updated, what sources it cites, and when a page or page element is sponsored.
Continuous Updates Addiction treatment is a rapidly evolving field. We update our content whenever statistics, clinical guidelines, laws, or best practices change — not on a fixed calendar schedule.

Our Content Development Process

1. Research and Drafting

Every article begins with research from authoritative, primary sources. Writers are briefed to prioritize government health agencies, peer-reviewed studies, and clinical guidelines over secondary reporting. Draft content is structured to directly answer the questions readers are actually asking.

2. Fact-Checking

Before publication, every statistic, treatment claim, medication detail, and legal reference is verified against its original source. Statistics older than three years are flagged for replacement with more current data when available.

3. Clinical Review

Content involving medical, clinical, or treatment topics undergoes review by credentialed professionals in behavioral health, addiction counseling, or related fields. Reviewers evaluate content for accuracy, safety, and alignment with current clinical best practices.

4. Editorial Review

Every article is edited for clarity, readability, tone, and alignment with our style guidelines on non-stigmatizing language. We avoid sensationalism, fear-based framing, and language that could shame or discourage someone from seeking help.

5. Legal and Compliance Check

Content is reviewed for compliance with healthcare advertising standards including LegitScript certification requirements, HIPAA-adjacent privacy considerations, and state-specific legal disclaimers where relevant.

6. Publication and Ongoing Maintenance

Once published, content is monitored and updated as needed. When clinical guidelines change, new data is released, laws are updated, or reader feedback identifies an error, we revise and republish with a new "Last Updated" date.

Sources We Rely On

Our content draws from a consistent set of authoritative sources across government health agencies, clinical organizations, peer-reviewed research, and state health departments.

Government Health Agencies

NIDA
National Institute on Drug Abuse — addiction science and research
SAMHSA
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
CDC
Centers for Disease Control — overdose and public health data
NIH / NIAAA
National Institutes of Health and the institute on Alcohol Abuse
FDA
Food and Drug Administration — medication approvals and safety
HHS
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Clinical and Professional Organizations

ASAM
American Society of Addiction Medicine — clinical guidelines
APA
American Psychiatric Association — DSM-5 and mental health standards
NAATP
National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers
CARF / Joint Commission
Treatment facility accreditation standards

Peer-Reviewed Research

We cite peer-reviewed studies indexed on PubMed, the NIH National Library of Medicine, and established journals such as JAMA, The Lancet, the American Journal of Psychiatry, and Addiction. Academic sources are prioritized over secondary reporting whenever the original data is publicly accessible.

State Health Departments

For state-specific content — including overdose statistics, Medicaid coverage, Good Samaritan laws, and naloxone access — we cite individual state health department publications and official government sources. This ensures local accuracy for readers seeking information specific to their state.

Reviewer Credentials

Clinical reviewers contributing to our content hold credentials in behavioral health, addiction treatment, or related fields. These may include:

  • M.D. — Medical Doctor, including Board-Certified Addiction Medicine specialists
  • D.O. — Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine
  • Ph.D. / Psy.D. — Clinical psychologists specializing in addiction and co-occurring disorders
  • LCSW / LMSW — Licensed Clinical and Master Social Workers
  • LPC / LMHC — Licensed Professional Counselors and Mental Health Counselors
  • LADC / CADC / CASAC — Licensed and Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselors
  • M.Ed. — Master of Education with focus on counseling or behavioral health
  • RN / BSN — Registered Nurses with clinical addiction or behavioral health experience

Individual reviewer credentials are displayed on the relevant article pages where clinical review has been performed.

How We Update Content

We do not follow a fixed calendar-based update schedule. Instead, we update content when any of the following occur:

  • Federal or state health agencies publish new data or guidelines
  • Clinical organizations revise treatment recommendations
  • New FDA-approved medications become available for addiction treatment
  • Laws or policies change that affect treatment access or legal protections
  • Peer-reviewed research challenges or updates established practice
  • Reader feedback or internal review identifies an error or outdated information

Every published article displays a "Last Reviewed" or "Last Updated" date. When substantial revisions are made, the date is updated and the article is republished.

Corrections Policy

Despite our best efforts, errors can occur. When they do, we correct them promptly and transparently. If you identify a factual error, outdated statistic, broken link, or misleading claim in any of our content, we want to know.

To report a correction, email info@addictionhelplineamerica.com with the URL of the page, a description of the issue, and a source for the correct information where possible. We review correction requests within five business days and update content as appropriate.

Advertising and Sponsorship Disclosure

Addiction Helpline America is a free service for readers, funded in part by paid placements from accredited treatment providers in our partner network. We maintain a strict separation between editorial content and commercial relationships:

  • Treatment provider listings that are paid (Premium or Featured) are clearly labeled
  • Editorial content — guides, explainers, state pages, treatment information — is written independently of advertiser relationships
  • We do not accept payment in exchange for favorable coverage, positive reviews, or editorial recommendations
  • Advertisers do not review, approve, or influence editorial content before publication

What We Will Never Do

  • Publish treatment claims without credible sourcing
  • Use fear-based or shame-based language to drive conversions
  • Guarantee specific treatment outcomes or recovery timelines
  • Misrepresent a facility's accreditation, licensing, or services
  • Recommend treatment providers based on advertising spend rather than clinical fit
  • Publish content designed to manipulate rather than inform

Contact Our Editorial Team

We welcome feedback, correction requests, and questions about our editorial process.

Editorial Team — Addiction Helpline America
Email: info@addictionhelplineamerica.com
Phone: (844) 561-0606
Web: Contact form
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