Medical review policy
Content last reviewed 2026-05-15.
BabyBerry is a companion product — not a medical device. This page sets out exactly what we will and will not claim, where we get general information from, and what triggers us to bring in a named clinical reviewer.
Our clinical posture
BabyBerry does not diagnose, treat, prescribe, screen, or replace any part of regulated medical care. The in-app AI companion provides general, plain-language information and consistently directs users to a qualified healthcare professional for decisions that matter. The website pages — including this one — describe the product and the company, and do not constitute medical advice.
Disclaimer: BabyBerry is for general information and self-tracking. It is not a medical device and does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider.
Where our general information comes from
For background pregnancy information surfaced inside the app, we lean on widely recognised public-health bodies. Useful starting points for any reader: the World Health Organization (who.int), the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (acog.org), the UK National Health Service (nhs.uk/pregnancy), the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (nice.org.uk), and the Hong Kong Department of Health's Family Health Service (fhs.gov.hk). For anything that matters to your pregnancy, please follow your own healthcare provider's guidance, not a third-party website.
- World Health Organization — Maternal health
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG)
- UK National Health Service — Pregnancy
- National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)
- Hong Kong Department of Health — Family Health Service
When we will bring in a named reviewer
If and when BabyBerry publishes a page that makes a specific clinical claim — beyond the general companion-style information we publish today — we will engage a credentialed obstetric or midwifery reviewer, and we will show their name, credentials, role, and review date on the page itself. Until that point, no clinical reviewer is named, by design: showing an unverified name is worse than showing none at all.
What BabyBerry is not for
BabyBerry is not appropriate for emergency advice, for substituting prenatal care, for high-risk pregnancy management, or for any decision that requires examination, imaging, lab results, or a qualified clinician's judgement. If you have an urgent concern, please contact your healthcare provider or local emergency services.
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