Editorial Disclaimer
What iPsychology content is, and what it is not.
Last reviewed on: 2026-04-24
1. Educational Purpose Only
iPsychology publishes general-interest educational articles about psychology, mental health, therapy, assessment, and related topics. Everything on the site is intended to inform and explain. Nothing on the site is intended as, and nothing should be taken as, medical, psychological, clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice for any specific individual or situation.
Reading a page on iPsychology is not a substitute for a consultation with a qualified professional. If you need help with a personal decision — including a decision about diagnosis, therapy, or medication — speak with a licensed provider who can review your individual circumstances.
2. No Doctor–Patient or Therapist–Client Relationship
No article, guide, email reply, or other interaction with iPsychology creates a doctor–patient, therapist–client, counselor–client, or similar relationship. Our writers and editors are not, through the Website, acting as your clinician.
If you have a specific mental-health question, or symptoms that concern you, contact a qualified provider. Our Find a Therapist guide explains how to search directories and evaluate fit.
3. Emergencies
iPsychology is not a crisis service and cannot respond to emergencies. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger or thinking about self-harm:
- 988 — Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (US, call or text)
- Text HOME to 741741 — Crisis Text Line (US & Canada)
- 911, or your local emergency number, for immediate danger
- International helplines: findahelpline.com
See our Crisis Resources page for more options.
4. Accuracy and Currency
Psychology is an evolving field. Diagnostic criteria, treatment guidelines, and terminology change over time. We review substantive pages on a rolling basis and show a "Last reviewed on" date near the top of each page. Despite careful editing, material on the site may contain errors, omissions, or information that has been superseded. We welcome corrections at contact@ipsychology.net.
5. Statistics, Studies, and Examples
When articles reference general ranges, "research indicates," or "many people," these summaries reflect widely reported patterns in the published psychology literature. They are not a guarantee that any particular individual will experience the same outcome. Results reported in research populations may not generalize to every reader.
6. Therapy and Assessment Information
Articles that describe therapy approaches (such as CBT, DBT, EMDR, or psychodynamic work) or psychological assessments (such as IQ, personality, or neuropsychological testing) explain what these are, how they are typically used, and what the evidence base looks like in general. Whether any approach or test is right for you is a decision for you and a qualified clinician, based on your individual situation.
7. External Links
Articles may link to external sources — research papers, professional associations, directories, and news articles. We provide these links for convenience and general reference. We do not control the content of external sites, and inclusion of a link does not imply endorsement of every statement on the linked site.
8. Advertising
iPsychology is supported in part by advertising served through Google AdSense. Ads are clearly identifiable as such. Advertising content is not endorsed by iPsychology, and the presence of an ad on a page does not imply a recommendation. For details, see our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.
9. Limitation of Liability
To the extent permitted by law, iPsychology, its editors, and its contributors disclaim liability for any loss, damage, or adverse outcome arising out of or in connection with use of the site or reliance on its content. See our Terms of Use for the full liability framework.
10. Questions
Questions about this disclaimer can be sent to contact@ipsychology.net.