Gathering the Record Carefully
This page explains how the editorial team at Drevani Journal selects topics, verifies sources, reviews drafts, and applies its editorial principles to articles on everyday nutrition and weight awareness.
Editorial Principles
Drevani 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.
The journal's core commitment is to an observational rather than prescriptive register. Articles examine patterns in the available evidence around everyday food practice and weight balance. They do not direct readers toward specific programmes, proprietary products, or structured plans.
Drevani Journal is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday nutrition practices and weight awareness. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body.
Topic Selection
Topics are drawn from three sources: the reader food diary archive, newly published nutritional research in independent literature, and observations from the editors' own records of seasonal eating patterns in England.
Research and Drafting
The writer assembles relevant published research, cross-references the food diary archive for corroborating patterns, and drafts the article in the journal's observational register. Claims are sourced at the sentence level where the evidence is specific.
Second-Editor Review
Every article is reviewed by a second editor before publication. The second editor checks factual accuracy, confirms that sources cited are accessible and relevant, and reviews the article for vocabulary that falls outside the journal's observational register.
Publication and Correction
Once approved, the article is published with full author attribution and date. If a factual error is identified after publication, the article is amended with a correction notice showing the original text, the corrected version, and the date of correction.
Source Verification
Content published by Drevani Journal is selected based on published nutritional research and reviewed for editorial accuracy by a second editor before publication. The journal does not base articles on press releases, commercial white papers, or unreviewed self-published material.
For each article, sources are categorised as follows:
- — Peer-reviewed nutritional journals
- — Government dietary guidelines (UK)
- — Contributed reader food diary archives
- — Independent nutrition research bodies
- — Brand-commissioned research
- — Unreviewed online content
- — Anecdotal claims without corroboration
- — Commercial product literature
Where the evidence base for a claim is thin or contested, the article says so explicitly. The journal does not overstate confidence in a finding or present a single study's conclusions as established consensus.
Accuracy and Correction Policy
The editorial team reviews all correction requests within five working days of receipt. When a correction is verified, the article is amended in three ways: the original passage is preserved with strikethrough formatting, the corrected version follows in brackets, and a dated correction notice is appended to the bottom of the article.
The journal does not delete articles or silently rewrite passages after publication. Every change is documented so that the record of what was published and when remains transparent.
Readers who believe an article contains a factual inaccuracy are encouraged to use the contact form and include the article title, the specific passage in question, and a brief note on the correction they are requesting.
What the Journal Covers and Does Not Cover
Articles published on Drevani Journal are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday nutrition practices and weight awareness. 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 does not cover acute wellness concerns, specific conditions requiring specialist input, or any topic that would require the writer to function in an advisory rather than observational role. Articles that begin to move in that direction during drafting are restructured or withdrawn.
Topics within scope: daily food habits and patterns, seasonal produce and the annual eating calendar, the relationship between everyday physical activity and eating patterns, whole food approaches to cooking, food journalling as a practice, and the evidence around gradual weight change.
Topics outside scope: structured weight-loss programmes, specific supplementation, eating patterns for any particular health condition, or any advice framed as a directive rather than an observation.
Commercial Independence
The journal carries no advertising, accepts no sponsored content, and has no commercial arrangements with food brands, wellness companies, supplement producers, or any other commercial entity whose interests might influence the editorial selection of subjects or the conclusions drawn in articles.
Contributing writers are required to disclose any commercial relationship — past or present — with any entity whose products or services are mentioned or might benefit from coverage in the article. Where a writer has such a relationship, the relevant article is either assigned to a different writer or the relationship is disclosed at the top of the article.
The journal does not accept requests for specific topic coverage in exchange for payment or other considerations. Pitches from communications agencies or brand representatives are not reviewed.
Methodology Questions
Where the evidence around a nutritional topic is genuinely contested — where different bodies of published research point in different directions — the article presents that uncertainty explicitly. The journal does not resolve contested questions by selecting the evidence that supports a preferred conclusion.
Yes. All identifying information is removed from contributed food diary records before they are reviewed or referenced in any article. Contributors are described only by region and general age range. No food diary record is published or quoted verbatim without explicit written permission from the contributor.
The methodology page is reviewed annually by the editorial team. Updates are made when the journal's processes change in a material way or when reader feedback identifies a gap in the current description. All changes are dated at the bottom of the page.
The editors' full backgrounds are described on the About page. Both editors have backgrounds in nutritional writing and food research. The journal does not require specific formal qualifications as a condition of contribution, but all articles are reviewed against the source verification standards described on this page before publication.
Readers are welcome to suggest topics via the contact form. Suggestions are reviewed by the editorial team and considered for future articles if they fall within the journal's scope. The editorial team cannot commit to covering every suggestion, and the final decision on what is published rests with the editors.
Methodology Record
This methodology page was last reviewed and updated in January 2026 by the editorial team at Drevani Journal. Material changes since the previous version (October 2025): expanded source verification standards (section 3) and addition of the commercial independence disclosure requirement for contributing writers (section 6).
For questions about methodology or editorial practice not answered here, contact the editors via the contact page.