How We Work
Standards in Editorial Practice.
Oramin Gazette is an independent editorial publication exploring everyday supplementation habits, nutritional awareness, and active lifestyle choices for men. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body.
Oramin Gazette 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.
Articles published on Oramin Gazette are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday supplementation habits and nutritional awareness for active men. 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 Gazette accepts no funding from supplement brands, nutrition companies, or affiliated commercial interests. All article topics are selected on editorial merit, not commercial arrangement.
Content published by Oramin Gazette is selected based on published nutritional research and reviewed for editorial accuracy by a second editor before publication.
When factual errors are identified, corrections are published at the foot of the relevant article within five working days of verification, with the nature of the correction noted clearly.
Any commercial relationship — past or present — that could reasonably influence a writer's subject selection is disclosed in full within the article in which it is relevant.
Topics are identified from published nutritional literature, reader correspondence, and observation of active men's supplement routines. Selection criteria favour specificity over breadth.
The assigned writer surveys available published research on the selected topic. Primary sources are identified and listed. Unverified claims are flagged before drafting begins.
Completed drafts are reviewed by a second editor for factual accuracy, tonal consistency with the publication's standards, and absence of unsubstantiated claims.
Approved articles are published with full author attribution, publication date, and source citations where applicable. Post-publication corrections follow the public corrections policy.
What the Gazette accepts as a source.
Peer-reviewed nutritional research
Published studies from recognised nutritional science journals. Authors and publication years are cited within the article where relevant.
Registered national health authorities
Publicly available nutritional guidelines from recognised bodies in Indonesia, Australia, the United Kingdom, or the United States — used as reference points, not as endorsements.
Writer's documented observation
First-person accounts of supplement routines, nutritional habits, and active lifestyle patterns. These are clearly framed as personal observation, not generalised advice.
Brand-sponsored content or brand-funded research
The Gazette does not cite research funded by brands with a commercial interest in the outcome. Where such research is referenced in passing, the sponsorship relationship is noted explicitly.
The Gazette does not publish claims that cannot be traced to a verifiable source. Where an observation reflects the writer's personal experience rather than published research, this distinction is made explicit in the text.
Superlative claims — "the most effective", "always produces results", "every man should" — are not used in editorial copy. The register is observational and evidence-informed, not promotional.
Where a topic is contested in published nutritional literature, the Gazette notes the contention rather than selecting the position most favourable to a particular conclusion.
Writers contributing to the Oramin Gazette are expected to maintain a working familiarity with published nutritional research in their subject area. Contributors are not required to hold formal qualifications, but are expected to demonstrate rigour in source selection.
All contributors complete a brief editorial induction covering the Gazette's source standards, disclosure requirements, and tonal expectations before their first article is published.
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.