Last reviewed July 10, 2026

Editorial Standards

Our goal is accurate, useful, and transparent reporting on healthspan, longevity science, and the organizations shaping the field.

Accuracy and verification

We verify material claims before publication and favor primary sources: peer-reviewed research, trial registries, regulatory records, company filings, direct interviews, and original announcements. When an important claim cannot be independently verified, we attribute it clearly rather than presenting it as established fact.

Sources and attribution

Facts, quotations, images, and third-party analysis are attributed to their sources. Anonymous sourcing is used only when the information is important, the source has direct knowledge, and naming the source could create a credible risk. The editor must know the source’s identity.

Bylines

We prefer full, verifiable bylines linked to author profiles. “Editorial Team” is reserved for stories reported or reviewed collaboratively and is not used to conceal the identity of a sole writer.

Science, health, and uncertainty

We distinguish laboratory findings, animal research, observational data, clinical trials, and established medical practice. Headlines and summaries should not overstate causality or clinical readiness. Limitations, conflicts of interest, and the status of experimental interventions are included when they materially affect how evidence should be understood.

News, analysis, and opinion

News reporting, analysis, interviews, research briefs, deep dives, and opinion are labeled by format. Opinion reflects the argument of its named author or the stated editorial position and is excluded from our news-specific syndication feeds.

Conflicts, sponsorships, and commercial relationships

AGE.HOUSE owns and operates media age.house. When AGE.HOUSE, its founders, partners, sponsors, or closely affiliated organizations are material to a story, we disclose that relationship. Sponsored or paid material is labeled prominently. Payment does not buy unlabelled editorial coverage.

Use of AI and other tools

Editors may use software, including AI-assisted tools, for tasks such as transcription, translation, research organization, or copy editing. A human editor remains responsible for every published claim, citation, headline, and correction. We do not treat generated text as a source.

Corrections and updates

Material errors are corrected promptly and disclosed on the article. Clarifications and substantive updates receive a visible note and updated timestamp. See our Corrections Policy for details.

Contact the newsroom

Send tips, sourcing questions, conflict disclosures, or editorial concerns to curious@age.house.