NewsPet publishes for pet owners first. Search visibility, AI citation, and social reach are useful only when a page helps a real reader make a safer, calmer, better-informed pet care decision.
People-first standard
Every guide should answer a specific reader problem, name the practical next step, and explain the safety boundary when a topic touches food, health, behavior, injury, poisoning risk, or urgent symptoms. A page should not exist only because a keyword is easy to target.
How automated assistance may be used
NewsPet may use automated tools to organize research, draft outlines, create working drafts, generate editorial image concepts, check formatting, or run quality audits. These tools are treated as production support, not as a substitute for editorial judgment.
Before publication, public pages should be edited for usefulness, factual caution, source transparency, readability, internal links, image relevance, metadata, and schema that matches visible content. Health and safety content must avoid diagnosis and direct urgent situations to a licensed veterinarian or local emergency service.
What NewsPet does not do
- We do not publish copied, scraped, spun, or mass-produced low-value articles.
- We do not invent veterinary review, product testing, credentials, interviews, or first-hand experience.
- We do not make medical promises, prescribe treatment, or hide uncertainty when a professional should be involved.
- We do not use shocking animal harm, exploitative rescue framing, or unsupported fear claims for traffic.
- We do not let ad or affiliate potential decide an editorial conclusion.
Source and citation standard
Claims about food safety, recalls, toxins, urgent symptoms, veterinary boundaries, product safety, or legal/regulatory facts should use credible sources where possible: official agencies, veterinary associations, universities, recognized welfare organizations, original manufacturer notices, or primary documentation.
Quality controls before publishing
- Confirm the page has a clear reader intent, useful title, excerpt, and quick answer where appropriate.
- Check that sources are relevant, current enough for the claim, and not broken.
- Check that health-adjacent pages include a visible veterinary boundary.
- Remove unfinished notes, filler text, unsupported certainty, and repeated generic wording.
- Confirm schema, FAQ markup, and internal links reflect content visible on the page.
- Keep weak or unfinished public pages out of search indexing until they are improved.
Reader feedback and corrections
Readers can report concerns through the Contact page. Substantive corrections are handled through the Correction Policy. For health and safety boundaries, see the Medical Disclaimer.