How we verify information on SafeTripVax
- We separate factual data from marketing claims.
- We track sources and update dates whenever possible.
- We prefer structured fields (prices, dates, scope) over vague descriptions.
- If something can’t be confirmed, we label it as such.
Confidence signals (what they mean)
You will see these signals next to selected information. They are meant to reduce “guessing”.
We store a link or reference for the claim (when available).
A medical reviewer checked the wording and safety notes.
You can see when we last verified the information.
The guidance depends on destination rules and local epidemiology.
What we check (practical, not theoretical)
- Is the scope explicit? (what is included / excluded)
- Are prices comparable? (total cost, not only “from” price)
- Are dates clear? (validity, updatedAt, review cadence)
- Are safety red flags included? (when to consult a clinician)
- Is the source credible and current? (and do we link it)
How to use this page
- Start with confidence signals next to the data you care about.
- Compare structured fields first (scope, total cost, dates) — not slogans.
- If something is missing, ask for the source and the last update date.
Example: “verified” vs marketing
- Offer A shows total cost, what is included, and an aftercare timeline.
- Offer B shows only a “from” price and avoids the scope details.
- We rank A higher and treat B as incomplete until clarified.
What we don’t do
- We don’t promise outcomes (“guaranteed”, “risk-free”).
- We don’t replace a clinician — we help you ask better questions.
- We don’t hide uncertainty — if data is missing, we show that clearly.
Help us improve
If you spot an inconsistency, outdated source, or missing detail, send it to us. We use feedback to improve ranking and clarity over time.
Important note
Health guidance can change. Always verify critical decisions with a qualified clinician—especially for pregnancy, chronic illness, immunosuppression, or travel with infants.