trust
Medical Disclaimer
Understand when to stop using the atlas as a decision aid and use qualified care, emergency guidance, or professional context instead.
Quick Answer
This site is not clinically reviewed. Pages are maintained by the site publisher using named public sources, conservative wording, visible content-check dates, and safety-first editing rules. The atlas does not provide medical advice, treatment, medication guidance, emergency guidance, or personal clearance.
Before You Try This
This trust page is educational and not medical advice. It cannot assess symptoms, urgency, medicines, pregnancy, skin, injury, recovery, or suitability for pressure.
Ask qualified care for personal, urgent, severe, persistent, unusual, pregnancy-related, medication-related, child-related, chronic-condition-related, injury-related, post-surgery, or unclear concerns.
Is This the Right Page to Read Now?
Use Medical Disclaimer when the reader needs this trust boundary before using health-adjacent point, tool, or wellness pages.
Medical Disclaimer fails if it creates a fake reviewer, private advice channel, or clinical authority the site does not have.
Stop using the atlas as the decision-maker when symptoms, medication, pregnancy, children, chronic illness, wounds, surgery, severe symptoms, or uncertainty are involved. Keep the next page education-only and do not send personal health details through the site.


Medical Disclaimer stop-rule visual context
- Use the visual reference only after the disclaimer confirms the question is not urgent or personal.
- Let the stop rule override all point, tool, and printable visuals.
- Leave the atlas when the real decision needs qualified care rather than another page.
Medical Disclaimer explains how to read the atlas; it does not add a reviewer, clinical conclusion, or private advice channel.
Why This Page Gets Extra Attention
Reader Scenario
A reader needs Medical Disclaimer to choose one next page, not to collect a larger set of options.
Common Misread
Do not treat Medical Disclaimer as permission to browse past the page's own boundary.
Editorial Call
Medical Disclaimer should make the publishing boundary visible without pretending to provide clinical review.
Best Next Choice
Choose whether Medical Disclaimer and the site's education-only model fit the reader's need before returning to points or tools.
Use the visual as a reading route, not a private safety clearance.
The boundary in one paragraph
This site is not clinically reviewed. Pages are maintained by the site publisher using named public sources, conservative wording, visible content-check dates, and safety-first editing rules. The atlas is for education and safety navigation, not medical advice or personal clearance.
What the atlas does not provide
It does not identify conditions, treat, give medication instructions, manage medication, decide urgency, clear pregnancy or child use, assess wounds, explain severe symptoms, or replace a clinician, pharmacist, emergency service, or licensed practitioner.
When to leave the atlas
Leave the atlas for severe, sudden, persistent, worsening, unusual, frightening, pregnancy-related, medication-related, child-related, post-surgery, wound-related, injury-related, neurologic, chest, breathing, fainting, or hard-to-interpret concerns.
How this changes point pages
A point page can remain useful for names, codes, pinyin, meridians, broad landmarks, culture, and source limits. It cannot become a private care plan because the reader found a matching symptom phrase.
How this changes tools and cards
A tool result is not a recommendation, and a printable card is not a permission slip. Both should send risk questions back to Safety or qualified care instead of making action feel easier.
Best next page after the disclaimer
Open urgent-care signs for severe or frightening symptoms, medication boundaries for medicine questions, and safety basics before any self-pressure reading path.
Questions Readers Usually Ask
Can this site tell me whether acupressure is safe for me?
No. It can explain public safety boundaries, but it cannot assess personal suitability, symptoms, medication context, pregnancy, injuries, or urgency.
Can I use a point page instead of asking care?
No. If the question is personal or risky, use qualified care rather than point pages.
What if I only want a gentle routine?
Gentle still needs context. Stop when risk, uncertainty, symptoms, medication, pregnancy, wounds, or injury are involved.
Sources Used
For Medical Disclaimer, these notes are tied to this page asset: A direct disclaimer page that explains the boundary in reader language before tools, cards, point pages, or wellness guides are used for personal decisions. They show which references support names, location terms, safety boundaries, cultural context, visual attribution, or content-check wording. They do not assess your symptoms, medication, pregnancy status, skin, or personal health situation for this page.