Contact
Contact DigestivEaz.Com
Questions, feedback, a correction or a collaboration idea? Drop us a message and a real person will get back to you.
This is the front door. A question about something we've published, a correction, a pitch, or a note telling us a guide left you more confused than when you arrived — all of it is welcome, and all of it gets read.
One thing worth saying before you write: DigestivEaz.Com is a publication, not a clinic. That shapes what we can usefully answer, and what we'll always hand back to someone qualified to look at it.
What DigestivEaz.Com can help with
- Questions about a guide — if a paragraph didn't land, tell us. Confusing writing is our problem to fix, not yours to decode.
- Corrections — a broken link, a misread study, a claim that doesn't match its source.
- Topic suggestions — the question you couldn't find a straight answer to anywhere else.
- Pitches — if you know a subject well and can write it in plain English, we'd like to hear from you.
- Press and general enquiries — who we are, how we work, and how a guide gets made.
What DigestivEaz.Com won't do
- Diagnose, or comment on your symptoms. It's the one line we never cross, however kindly the question is asked.
- Take money for cures. We don't sell supplements, and we don't accept affiliate deals or sponsorships attached to health claims.
- Publish miracles. No cleanses, no detox resets, no "one weird trick".
- Invent numbers. If we can't source a claim, we don't say it — which is exactly why corrections matter to us.
What to expect
- A reply, usually within 2–3 business days. Occasionally longer, if answering you properly means going back and reading the research first.
- A straight answer, or an honest "we don't know". We'd rather tell you it depends than sell you a shortcut.
- A pointer, not a prescription. Where we've already written about your question, we'll send you the link. Where we haven't, it goes on the list.
- No sales follow-up. Writing to us doesn't sign you up for anything — our privacy policy covers what happens to the details you send.
And one thing it doesn't do: emailing us, or subscribing to the newsletter, doesn't create a doctor–patient relationship. We're writers and researchers, and we'll always say so.
Report a correction
We don't invent numbers. If we can't source something, we don't publish it — and when we get a detail wrong anyway, we'd rather hear it from you than leave it standing. Corrections are one of the few things that keep a health site honest, so they go to the front of the queue.
The most useful corrections tell us four things:
- The link to the article, and the sentence or claim in question.
- What's wrong with it — a misreading, an out-of-date figure, a dead link.
- What you believe is accurate instead.
- A source, if you have one. It doesn't have to be formal.
We check the claim against its original source. If it's wrong, we fix the guide and update its date, because when the evidence moves, the guide moves. If we think it's right, we'll tell you why rather than quietly leave it. Either way, you get an answer. Our editorial policy sets out the whole process.