Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions — InformationTherapy.in

These are the questions we get most often — about this website, how it works, the health topics it covers, and what readers can and can’t use it for. If your question isn’t here, email us at amanalria3@gmail.com.

About InformationTherapy.in

What is InformationTherapy.in?

InformationTherapy.in is an independent health information website covering men’s health, mental health, AI in healthcare, and health system navigation.

The site is built around one idea: that accurate, clearly written health information helps people make better decisions about their care — and that most available health content falls short of that standard.

Every article is researched from credible medical sources and written to be genuinely useful, not just keyword-optimized.

Who writes the content on this site?

Content is researched and written by health content specialists with a focus on accuracy, readability, and practical value. We cross-reference information against peer-reviewed studies, WHO guidelines, CDC data, and major medical institutions before publication.

We are not physicians, but we take the responsibility of health communication seriously and cite our sources transparently.

Is InformationTherapy.in a medical website?

It is a health information website — not a medical practice. There’s an important difference.

We provide context, research summaries, and explanations of health topics. We do not diagnose, treat, or prescribe. Everything you read here should inform a conversation with your doctor, not replace it.

How often is the content updated?

We update content on an ongoing basis as new research is published, guidelines change, or significant developments occur in the topics we cover.

Health information moves fast — particularly in areas like AI in healthcare and healthcare policy — and we revisit articles to keep them current rather than leaving outdated content live.

Does InformationTherapy.in accept advertising?

Yes, this site displays advertisements through Google AdSense. These are served by Google based on browsing data and are not selected or endorsed by InformationTherapy.in.

We do not accept sponsored content, paid editorial placements, or advertiser-driven article topics. What gets written is determined by what’s useful to readers, not by who’s paying for display space.

Health Information and Medical Advice

Can I use this site for medical advice?

No. InformationTherapy.in provides health information — educational context and research summaries — not medical advice. Nothing on this site constitutes a clinical consultation or creates a doctor-patient relationship.

For any personal health concern, consult a licensed healthcare professional who knows your individual circumstances and medical history.

I read something on this site that contradicts what my doctor told me. What should I do?

Trust your doctor. Not because doctors are infallible — they’re not — but because your physician has access to your complete medical history, examination findings, and the specific context of your situation that no website can have.

If you’ve read something that raises a genuine question, bring it to your appointment and discuss it.

That’s exactly what health information is useful for: better conversations with the people who are actually treating you.

Can I share articles from InformationTherapy.in with my doctor?

Absolutely. That’s one of the intended uses of this content. If an article helped you understand a condition or clarify a question you want to raise with your provider, sharing it as a conversation starter is entirely appropriate.

Just be aware that your doctor’s assessment of your specific situation takes precedence over any general information published here.

Where does your health information come from?

We cite sources throughout our content — peer-reviewed journals, WHO, CDC, NIH, American Cancer Society, CMS, major hospital systems, and other credible institutions.

We do not use anonymous blogs, unverified studies, or health influencer content as source material. When specific statistics are included, they are sourced from verifiable, named publications or institutions.

What topics does InformationTherapy.in cover?

The main coverage areas are men’s health (physical and mental), women’s health, mental health broadly, AI and technology in healthcare, healthcare system navigation (insurance, clinics, home care, patient portals), and health news with real clinical relevance.

We don’t cover celebrity health gossip for its own sake — when public figures’ health stories carry genuine public health relevance (like King Charles’s cancer diagnosis driving screening awareness), we cover the public health angle.

Men’s Health and Mental Health

When is Men’s Mental Health Month?

This question comes up constantly. June is Men’s Health Month (general physical and mental health awareness). November is Men’s Mental Health Month specifically — tied to Movember, the global campaign funding mental health research and prostate cancer awareness.

Some organizations observe both months for different purposes. November is the one with the strongest mental-health-specific campaign infrastructure.

Why does this site focus so much on men’s health?

Because men’s health is chronically underserved in mainstream health media. Men die younger than women in virtually every country.

They visit doctors less frequently, get diagnosed at later stages, and are significantly underrepresented in general health content relative to their health burden.

The data on men’s mental health — suicide rates, depression rates, treatment access gaps — is particularly stark. We cover it because it matters and because most outlets don’t cover it well.

I’m struggling with my mental health. What should I do?

The most important step is reaching out to someone — a doctor, a therapist, a trusted person in your life, or a crisis line. In the US, you can call or text 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, 24/7) if things feel urgent.

For non-crisis mental health support, your primary care doctor is a good starting point — they can refer you to appropriate care or help you evaluate options.

We have articles on this site about finding mental health care, what different types of therapy involve, and what to expect from the process. But none of those replace actually talking to someone.

Do you cover specific men’s health clinics like Gameday Men’s Health or Ellie Mental Health?

Yes. We research and write about specific health organizations when they’re generating significant search traffic, opening new locations, or are otherwise newsworthy in ways our readers would find useful.

Our coverage is informational — we report what these organizations do, what patients say, and what the relevant context is — not promotional. We don’t accept payment from clinics or health organizations to feature them on this site.

Privacy, Data, and Technical Questions

Does InformationTherapy.in collect my personal data?

We collect only what is necessary to operate the site: technical data (IP address, browser type, pages visited) through standard analytics tools, and information you voluntarily provide when you contact us. We do not sell your personal information. Full details are in our Privacy Policy.

Does this site use cookies?

Yes. Cookies are used to support site functionality, analytics (Google Analytics), and advertising (Google AdSense). You can manage cookie preferences through your browser settings. Disabling cookies may affect site functionality. See our Privacy Policy for more detail.

I found an error or outdated information. How do I report it?

Email us at amanalria3@gmail.com with the URL of the page and a description of the issue. We take corrections seriously and update content promptly when errors are confirmed. If you can point to a source that contradicts what we’ve published, that’s helpful — include it in your message.

Can I republish content from InformationTherapy.in?

Short excerpts (a sentence or two, properly attributed with a link to the original article) are fine for commentary or reference purposes. Republishing full articles — even with attribution — is not permitted without prior written permission.

If you’re interested in content licensing or partnership, reach out via email and describe what you have in mind.

I want to write for InformationTherapy.in. How do I pitch?

Email us at amanalria3@gmail.com with a brief introduction, your relevant background (clinical, research, or health journalism), and the topic you’d like to write about. All contributed content is reviewed for accuracy and editorial fit.

We prioritize contributors with verifiable health credentials or significant journalism experience in health topics.

Still Have a Question?

If your question isn’t answered here, get in touch directly. We respond to every message.

Email: amanalria3@gmail.com
Contact Page: informationtherapy.in/contact/