Important
The information on MedCentralHub is for educational purposes only. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for the judgment of a qualified healthcare professional.
Last updated: May 23, 2026
Core Principle
MedCentralHub is a medical reference site. The content on every page — drug monographs, condition descriptions, interaction summaries, dosing tables, pregnancy and pediatric considerations, calculators, symptom explanations, and educational articles — is provided for informational and educational purposes only.
The Service is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Nothing on this site creates a physician-patient, pharmacist-patient, or any other professional relationship between you and MedCentralHub or its contributors. The editorial team writes for a general audience and cannot know your specific health history, current medications, allergies, organ function, pregnancy status, genetic variations, or other personal factors that determine whether any particular medication or treatment is safe and appropriate for you.
Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional — a physician, pharmacist, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or other licensed provider — with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, medication, treatment, or health concern. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on MedCentralHub.
Who to Consult
Different medical questions warrant different kinds of professional consultation:
Data Limitations
The clinical information on MedCentralHub is sourced from authoritative public datasets maintained by U.S. federal health agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration (FDA / OpenFDA), the National Library of Medicine (RxNorm, MedlinePlus), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). While these sources are the gold standard for U.S. drug and health information, they are not infallible and not exhaustive:
Drug Interactions
MedCentralHub's interaction checker and related tools are useful screening aids — but they are not exhaustive and they cannot replace clinical judgment. The pharmacology of drug-drug, drug-food, drug-alcohol, drug-disease, and drug-genetic interactions is enormously complex, and even the most comprehensive databases include only interactions for which published evidence exists.
A "no interaction found" result does not mean an interaction cannot occur. Conversely, an interaction flagged by the checker may be clinically insignificant in many patients depending on dose, timing, duration, and individual factors. Always review your full medication list — including over-the-counter products, vitamins, supplements, and herbal remedies — with your pharmacist or clinician. Bring an updated list to every appointment.
Special Populations
Several patient populations require individualized consultation that no reference site can substitute for:
Pregnancy and breastfeeding: Many medications cross the placenta or appear in breast milk to some degree. The risk-benefit calculation depends on gestational age, the severity of the maternal condition, the specific drug and dose, and emerging evidence. Pregnancy category information shown on MedCentralHub is intended as background; individual decisions must be made in consultation with an obstetrician or maternal-fetal medicine specialist.
Pediatric care: Children are not small adults. Weight- and surface-area-based dosing, developmental pharmacokinetics, and pediatric-specific contraindications mean that pediatric care must be directed by a pediatrician or pediatric pharmacist. Dosage tools on this site provide reference ranges, not prescriptions.
Geriatric care: Older adults are at heightened risk for drug interactions, falls, cognitive impairment from anticholinergic burden, and complications of polypharmacy. The Beers Criteria and STOPP/ START criteria are reference tools, but individualized review by a clinician familiar with the patient is essential.
Off-Label Use
Medications are sometimes prescribed for uses that are not formally approved by the FDA — this is called "off-label" prescribing. Off-label use is legal, common, and often well supported by clinical evidence; in some specialties (notably pediatrics, oncology, and psychiatry) a substantial fraction of prescribing is off-label. However, off-label use should always be directed by a qualified physician who has weighed the risks and benefits for your individual situation.
MedCentralHub provides information about FDA-approved indications and may note widely recognized off-label uses for educational completeness. This content should not be construed as a recommendation that you take or administer a medication for any off-label purpose without explicit clinician guidance.
By Using This Site
By accessing or using MedCentralHub, you acknowledge that you have read, understood, and agree to this Medical Disclaimer. You accept full responsibility for any health decisions you make and agree to consult a qualified healthcare professional before acting on any information you read here. This Medical Disclaimer is part of and incorporated into our Terms of Service.
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