EDITORIAL STANDARDS.
Talrun Journal operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter.
Article commissions originate from the editorial team or from reviewed external pitches. Each commission is assessed against the journal's scope: does the proposed article address an aspect of everyday nutrition that is under-documented in accessible editorial form?
Writers are required to ground factual claims in identifiable published sources: peer-reviewed nutritional research, published dietary guidelines (NHS, BDA, SACN), or food composition data from verified databases. Anecdote is labelled as anecdote.
Every article submitted for publication is reviewed by a second editor. The review assesses factual accuracy, source traceability, and tone register. Articles are returned for revision if claims cannot be substantiated or if language implies unverifiable outcomes.
Where a specific data point is cited — nutrient concentrations, population-level statistics, dietary reference values — the source is independently verified by the reviewing editor before publication. Source URLs or DOI references are retained in the editorial file.
Articles are published with a visible author attribution, publication date, and (where relevant) a content category. Articles that draw on a narrower or more contested evidence base carry a contextual note within the text.
Published articles are subject to post-publication review if new evidence challenges claims made within them, or if reader corrections identify factual errors. Corrections are applied visibly, with a dated correction notice appended to the article.
Which Sources Are Acceptable
Peer-reviewed papers published in indexed nutritional science journals (e.g., American Journal of Specialist Nutrition, British Journal of Nutrition, Nutrients). Data from these sources may be cited directly with appropriate contextualisation.
Published dietary reference values and population-level guidelines from the Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition (SACN), National Health Service (NHS), British Dietetic Association (BDA), and equivalent European bodies.
Food composition databases: McCance & Widdowson's (UK), USDA FoodData Central, and Nutrition Value databases. Nutrient concentrations cited in articles draw from these sources unless otherwise noted.
Brand-published research, wellness-product white papers, unindexed blogs, or social media claims are not acceptable as primary sources. These may inform editorial direction but cannot be cited as factual authority.
"Content published by Talrun Journal is selected based on published nutritional research and undergoes independent batch verification for quality and labelling accuracy."
Commercial Independence
Talrun Journal is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body.
The journal accepts no advertising revenue, sponsored content arrangements, affiliate referral fees, or payment for editorial mentions. All funding derives exclusively from readership engagement.
Writers are required to declare any commercial relationships relevant to the subject matter of their articles before commissioning is confirmed. Where a relationship is judged by the editor to create a conflict of interest, the commission is not proceeded with.
What the Journal's Content Is — and Is Not
Articles published on Talrun Journal are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday wellness practices. The content is not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.
The journal's editorial scope is deliberately circumscribed. Articles address general dietary patterns, food composition, cooking methods, and the practical application of published nutritional guidance. They do not address supplement regimens beyond general dietary context, specific individual nutritional requirements, or matters that require professional assessment.
Where published research is actively contested, or where study populations are specific and may not generalise to all readers, the editorial team includes a contextual note within the article text. We recommend speaking with a qualified wellness or nutrition professional before introducing any new habit or routine to your daily life, particularly if you have specific dietary requirements.
The presence of a nutrient, food, or dietary pattern within an article does not constitute an endorsement of any commercial product containing or relating to that nutrient, food, or pattern. All named foods and ingredients are discussed in their whole or naturally occurring form unless otherwise explicitly stated.