Contact
Neurologicalauthority.com serves as a reference resource covering neurological conditions, diagnostic procedures, treatment frameworks, and regulatory context within the United States healthcare system. This page describes how to reach the editorial office, what to expect after submitting an inquiry, and the geographic scope of the information published here. Readers seeking emergency medical care or urgent neurological evaluation should contact 911 or proceed to the nearest emergency department — this resource does not provide clinical consultations.
Response expectations
Inquiries submitted through the contact form on this site are reviewed by the editorial team on a structured schedule. Standard response time for editorial and factual correction requests is 3 to 5 business days. Licensing or republication requests typically require 7 to 10 business days for review, depending on the complexity of the request.
The editorial office distinguishes between four categories of inbound communication:
- Factual corrections — Requests to correct a specific claim, statistic, or named source citation within published content. These are prioritized and reviewed against primary sources, including publications from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), and applicable federal regulatory documents.
- Editorial contributions — Proposals to contribute subject-matter expertise, citations, or supplemental information to existing pages. Contributors must identify their professional credentials and name the specific source documents supporting any proposed additions.
- Licensing and republication — Requests to reproduce content from this domain in whole or in part. Republication is subject to terms that preserve source attribution and prohibit modification of clinical framing.
- Technical or accessibility issues — Reports of broken links, inaccessible content under Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act (29 U.S.C. § 794d), or formatting errors that affect readability.
Inquiries that fall outside these categories — including requests for personalized medical advice, physician referrals, or insurance guidance — will not receive a substantive response. Those seeking a neurological evaluation pathway may consult the How to Get Help for Neurological Conditions page for structured guidance on accessing care.
Additional contact options
The primary channel for all non-emergency communication is the site's contact form, which routes messages directly to the editorial queue. Two secondary channels exist for specific purposes:
Press and media inquiries follow a separate pathway and carry a target response window of 48 hours on business days. Journalists or researchers citing this resource in published work are encouraged to submit the specific page URL and the context of citation so editorial staff can verify accuracy before publication goes to press.
Accessibility accommodation requests are treated as a distinct category under the framework established by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA, 42 U.S.C. § 12101) and Section 508 compliance standards maintained by the U.S. Access Board. These requests are routed immediately to the technical team and carry a 2-business-day acknowledgment target.
All submitted data is handled in accordance with privacy practices aligned with applicable federal guidelines. No personally identifiable health information should be submitted through the contact form, consistent with guidance from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regarding protected health information under HIPAA (45 C.F.R. Parts 160 and 164).
How to reach this office
The contact form accessible from this page is the primary mechanism for reaching the editorial and technical teams. When submitting a factual correction, the following structured format produces the fastest resolution:
- Identify the exact page URL containing the disputed content.
- Quote the specific sentence or figure in question.
- Name the authoritative source (with publication year if applicable) that contradicts or supplements the published claim.
- Provide the submitter's full name and professional affiliation, if relevant.
Submissions that include all 4 of these elements are resolved at a rate significantly faster than unstructured messages, because editorial staff can immediately cross-reference the named source without requesting clarification.
Phone contact is not available for this editorial office. The resource operates as a digital-only reference property, and all correspondence is managed asynchronously to ensure a documented record of each exchange — a practice consistent with editorial accountability standards referenced by the American Medical Writers Association (AMWA).
Service area covered
Neurologicalauthority.com covers neurological health information within the scope of the United States healthcare and regulatory system. Regulatory framing on this site references federal agencies including the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the NIH National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The resource does not publish content tailored to the regulatory frameworks of individual U.S. states, except where a specific state-level policy affects a nationally relevant topic — for example, state Medicaid coverage policies that intersect with treatment access for conditions such as multiple sclerosis or epilepsy. Pages addressing such intersections link to the applicable state agency or federal CMS documentation at the point of reference.
Content on this site is not calibrated to non-U.S. regulatory systems. Readers based outside the United States may find general clinical and anatomical information useful, but all regulatory, insurance, and procedural guidance should be verified against the standards applicable in the reader's own jurisdiction — for example, guidance from the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) for European readers, or the World Health Organization (WHO) neurological disorder frameworks for international public health context.
The site's subject coverage spans 6 major clinical domains: neurological anatomy, diagnostic procedures, neurological conditions and disorders, treatment and therapeutic options, symptom recognition, and life management for chronic neurological disease. Pages within each domain are cross-referenced to allow readers to move from foundational definitions — such as What Is Neurology — through to clinical specifics such as Electroencephalogram (EEG) or MRI for Brain and Spine Conditions without requiring prior clinical training to navigate the structure.
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