Medical Disclaimer
Last updated: 17 May 2026
Educational Purpose Only
Progesterone Hub publishes general educational content about progesterone, hormone balance, perimenopause, menopause, and related topics. The information is prepared with care, drawn from peer-reviewed literature and recognized clinical guidelines, and reviewed by an editorial board. It is, nevertheless, general information. It is not medical advice, not a diagnosis, not a prescription, and not a substitute for evaluation by a licensed clinician who knows your history.
No Doctor-Patient Relationship
Reading this site, contacting us, or clicking through to an affiliate partner does not create a doctor-patient relationship between you and the editors of Progesterone Hub. Any relationship of that kind must be established with a licensed practitioner — through a partner telehealth service, your existing provider, or a clinician of your choosing.
Hormone Therapy Decisions Are Individual
Hormone therapy — including bioidentical progesterone — must be individualized. The right decision for one woman is the wrong decision for another. Variables include but are not limited to:
- Personal and family medical history
- Current symptoms and their severity
- Current cycle status and reproductive stage
- Baseline hormone levels
- Concurrent medications
- Lifestyle, stress load, and individual goals
- Specific contraindications and risk factors
None of these can be assessed by reading a website. Do not start, stop, or change a hormone regimen based on general content alone.
Specific Limitations
- Doses mentioned on the Site are illustrative ranges from published literature. They are not prescriptions for any individual reader.
- Statements about safety profiles reflect current evidence and may change as new data emerges.
- The Site does not address fertility or pregnancy hormone protocols, which require specialized care.
- The Site does not provide emergency medical advice. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 (US) or your local emergency number.
Affiliate Relationships
Telehealth services linked from this Site are independent companies. We do not control their clinical protocols, provider credentials, or business practices. We refer because we believe they offer a reasonable path to qualified care, but you must do your own due diligence — read their credentials, verify state licensure, and read their terms.
When to See a Provider Promptly
Some symptoms warrant prompt medical evaluation rather than general reading. Examples:
- Sudden severe pain in the chest, abdomen, or pelvis
- Sudden severe headache, weakness, vision loss, or trouble speaking
- Heavy bleeding soaking through protection hourly for several hours
- Calf pain or swelling, particularly if one-sided
- Severe persistent depressed mood or thoughts of self-harm
- Signs of allergic reaction — rash, swelling, difficulty breathing
- New unexplained bleeding after menopause
For emergencies, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department.
Contact
Medical concerns about content accuracy: editor@progesterone.us.com.