Responsibility
Every page needs a human owner.
Tools can help with drafts, structure, code, and research workflows, but the responsibility stays with the person publishing the work.
Responsible use
Physiotherapy.ai includes products, prototypes, evidence workflows, and public ideas. Some of the work uses AI-assisted tools. That does not remove responsibility.
The rule is simple: if it touches healthcare, it needs clarity, boundaries, and human review.
Responsibility
Tools can help with drafts, structure, code, and research workflows, but the responsibility stays with the person publishing the work.
Clinical limits
Anything related to care, triage, diagnosis, treatment, or safety needs careful framing. Public pages should not pretend to replace clinicians.
Sources
If a page makes a clinical or research claim, the source, limitation, or product context should be visible enough to question. Nagomi sits close to this rule because it checks references and keeps the evidence trail open.
Public ideas
Submitted ideas are reviewed for clarity, relevance, privacy, safety, and fit before they become part of the site.
Privacy
Ideas should avoid personal health information. If a case is needed, it should be fictional, anonymized, or properly approved.
Quality
The site should grow through useful pages, clear examples, and honest project notes, not filler.
What this means in practice
Project pages are written to show what a tool does, where it is still evolving, and what it should not be used for. A prototype is named as a prototype. A collaboration is named as a collaboration. A clinical product is not described as medical replacement.
This also applies to submitted ideas. If someone shares something for the site, it needs to be reviewed before it appears publicly. The idea should be framed around a real problem and a realistic use case.
That makes the site more useful for readers, and it keeps the work honest.
Public workbench