Corrections Policy
PsyTheater Corrections Policy — errors, clarifications and article updates
PsyTheater is committed to correcting verified factual errors and improving published material when new information, clearer context or better sourcing becomes available.
Accuracy is especially important in psychology and mental health coverage. Readers may use our articles to understand symptoms, therapy concepts, psychiatric terminology or support options, so we treat corrections as part of editorial responsibility rather than as a cosmetic process.
What counts as a correction
A correction is appropriate when a published article contains a verified factual error. This may include incorrect names, dates, locations, statistics, clinical terms, source references, quote attribution, descriptions of research, or statements about an organization, person, treatment, condition or public document.
What counts as a clarification
A clarification may be added when wording was technically accurate but incomplete, ambiguous or easy to misunderstand. In mental health coverage, clarifications may be used to explain limits of evidence, the difference between screening and diagnosis, or the distinction between general education and personal clinical advice.
What counts as an update
An update may reflect new research, revised guidance, changed institutional information, new public statements, updated statistics, corrected links or a developing story. Updates are not necessarily corrections; they may simply improve context or reflect new information after publication.
Minor edits
Spelling, grammar, formatting, broken links, readability improvements and non-substantive style edits may be made without a separate correction note when they do not change the meaning of the article.
How to report an error
- Email [email protected].
- Include the article URL.
- Identify the exact sentence, claim, number or source that may be wrong.
- Provide a reliable source, document or explanation where possible.
- Include contact details if follow-up may be needed.
How we review reports
Correction requests are reviewed editorially. We may check the original source, compare additional documentation, review clinical or institutional context, and decide whether the issue requires a correction, clarification, update or no change.
Serious reports are reviewed, but PsyTheater may not be able to respond individually to every message. Requests from advertisers, sponsors, public figures or organizations covered by the site do not automatically lead to changes unless a factual basis is established.
Related pages
What is PsyTheater?
Founded in 2015 and developed as a broader psychology media platform, PsyTheater helps readers understand mental health topics through clear, evidence-informed editorial content. The publication brings together psychological education, practical self-reflection, expert-informed perspectives, and careful explanations of complex emotional states while keeping reader safety, professional standards, and responsible mental health communication at the center.