How Braloven Compendium selects, researches, reviews, and publishes articles on everyday nutrition and balanced living — with full transparency at every stage.
Braloven Compendium operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter.
Articles published on Braloven Compendium are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday wellness practices. The content is not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.
Braloven Compendium is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body.
Writers submit article pitches that are evaluated against the publication's coverage criteria: relevance to everyday nutrition, availability of published sources, and editorial balance across dietary perspectives.
Each article's factual claims are traced to published nutritional research, recognised dietary guidelines, or statements from qualified nutrition professionals. Unverifiable claims are removed prior to editorial review.
A second editor reads the complete draft independently, focusing on factual accuracy, tone consistency, and the absence of overstated claims. Divergent assessments are resolved editorially before any text reaches publication.
Approved articles are assigned a publication date, formatted to the style guide, and archived with their revision history. Post-publication corrections are logged in the article footer with the correction date.
Not all sources carry equal weight. The publication distinguishes between primary research, secondary synthesis, and practitioner commentary — and labels each accordingly within the article copy.
Peer-reviewed nutritional research from recognised academic databases. Preferred when available and relevant to the article subject. Cited with author, publication, and year.
Published dietary guidelines from recognised national and international nutrition bodies, used to contextualise recommendations around balanced meals, macronutrient ratios, and daily intake targets.
Statements from qualified nutrition professionals cited in editorial context, where the professional's credentials and the context of their statement are clearly identified within the copy.
Anecdotal claims without supporting evidence, promotional literature from commercial brands, and unattributed internet sources are excluded from all articles regardless of how plausible their content appears.
Every article published by Braloven Compendium passes through a two-editor review before the publication date is assigned. Single-editor sign-offs are not accepted in the current editorial workflow.
Every factual claim links to its source tier (see above). Citation formats follow the editorial style guide and are checked for accuracy as part of the second-editor review cycle.
Post-publication corrections are appended to the article page with the correction date and a clear description of what changed. Removed content is noted; it is not silently deleted.
Questions about editorial methodology, source attribution, or correction requests can be directed to the editorial team.
Contact the Editorial Team