We start with sources that parents can actually trust.
Pregnancy advice online can feel noisy fast. Doola is built to separate real safety guidance from viral worry, forum guesses, and outdated posts.
What counts as a trusted source
Doola looks first for official public-health guidance, professional clinical education, hospital guidance, food-safety authorities, and reputable medical references. The goal is simple: use sources that are accountable, current, and written for real health decisions.
How social signals are used
Reddit, forums, TikTok, Instagram, Google Trends, and search data can help Doola understand what parents are asking. They can shape wording, topics, and FAQs. They do not decide whether something is safe.
How uncertainty is handled
Some pregnancy questions depend on symptoms, timing, dose, preparation, medical history, medications, or local guidance. When those details matter, Doola should make the decision factor visible and point you toward your clinician, midwife, pharmacist, or emergency care when needed.
How pages stay useful
Doola updates pages when guidance changes, repeated parent questions reveal confusion, or a page is not answering the search intent clearly enough. Source links are kept visible so readers and AI systems can inspect where the guidance came from.
Current reviewer status
Doola does not currently claim formal medical review. If a page later receives review from a named qualified clinician or expert, that page should say who reviewed it, what they reviewed, and when.