Confused by a strange sensation in your body? Get clear answers in your inbox.

Content and Editorial Policy

Last updated: April 29, 2026

SensationInfo is a health information publication, and health content carries real responsibility. This page explains how we research, write, review, and update our articles — and the standards we hold ourselves to. We publish this policy openly because trust on a medical site has to be earned, not claimed.

Our Mission

SensationInfo exists to give clear, evidence-based answers to the questions people ask about abnormal body sensations — tingling, burning, numbness, pins and needles, and the conditions behind them. We write for the person searching at 11 p.m. who wants to understand what their body is doing, not the worst-case scenario.

Our core promise is threefold: explain what’s happening in language a non-doctor can use, tell you honestly when a symptom needs urgent care, and provide evidence-based answers without the panic that comes from generic symptom checkers.

Editorial Process

Every article on SensationInfo follows the same process from start to publication:

1. Topic selection. We choose article topics based on real questions people are asking — pulled from search data, “People Also Ask” boxes, health forums, and common patient queries. We prioritize specific, underserved questions over broad topics already well-covered by major medical sites.

2. Research. Each article is researched against peer-reviewed medical literature and guidance from established medical institutions, including the Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), MedlinePlus, the U.K. National Health Service (NHS), and PubMed-indexed journals. We cite our sources at the bottom of every article.

3. Writing. Articles are written by Dr. Peeyush Kumawat in plain English. We avoid jargon where possible and explain technical terms when they’re necessary. Each article follows a consistent structure: what the sensation is, what causes it, when it’s a red flag, how it’s diagnosed, what treatments help, and what you can do at home.

4. Medical review. Every article is reviewed for medical accuracy, clarity, and appropriate caveats before publication.

5. Publication. Articles are published with a visible publish date, author byline, and source list. The “Last updated” date reflects the most recent revision.

Sources We Trust

We rely on primary medical sources and established health institutions, not other blogs. Our typical sources include:

  • Mayo Clinic
  • Cleveland Clinic
  • U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and MedlinePlus
  • U.K. National Health Service (NHS)
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • Peer-reviewed journals indexed on PubMed
  • Clinical guidelines from professional medical associations

We do not cite other health blogs, opinion sites, or sources without clear medical authority.

Updates and Corrections

Medical knowledge evolves. We review and update articles when:

  • New research changes the standard understanding of a topic
  • A reader points out an error or outdated claim
  • Guidelines from major medical institutions change
  • We find a clearer way to explain something

When we make a substantive change, we update the “Last updated” date. For significant corrections, we add an editor’s note explaining what changed.

If you find an error, an outdated claim, or something that’s unclear in any article, please email us at hello@sensationinfo.com. We treat reader corrections seriously and respond to every legitimate report.

What We Don’t Do

To be transparent about our limits:

  • We do not diagnose medical conditions. Articles are educational, not personal medical advice.
  • We do not provide personal consultations through the Site, comments, or email.
  • We do not recommend products or supplements we wouldn’t suggest to our own family.
  • We do not publish sponsored content disguised as editorial.
  • We do not write articles whose conclusions are dictated by advertisers or affiliate partners.
  • We do not use sensational headlines or fear-based framing to drive clicks.
  • We do not republish content from other sources.
  • We do not use AI to generate medical content without human research and review.

AI and Automation Disclosure

We may use AI tools to assist with editing, formatting, keyword research, or generating non-medical illustrations. We do not use AI to write medical content. Every article on SensationInfo is researched, written, and reviewed by Dr. Peeyush Kumawat. The medical reasoning and clinical judgment in our content is human.

Affiliate and Advertising Standards

Where we include affiliate links, they are clearly disclosed and never influence what we recommend. We only link to products we believe are reasonably evidence-supported and useful. We will not recommend a product because it pays a higher commission.

If we display advertisements through third-party networks, we do not control which specific ads appear and we do not endorse advertised products. We may review or block specific advertisers if their products conflict with our editorial values.

Complaints and Feedback

If you have a complaint about the accuracy, fairness, or tone of any article, please email hello@sensationinfo.com with the article title, the specific concern, and any supporting sources. We will investigate and respond within 14 days.

Contact

For editorial questions, corrections, or feedback: hello@sensationinfo.com