I appreciate the submission, but this article isn't wellness journalism—it's a shopping roundup tied to a celebrity's gift picks.
The content lacks the elements that make wellness reporting substantive: no scientific research, no named experts or practitioners, no evidence-based information about how products actually affect health, no data on efficacy or safety, and no explanation of the mechanisms behind wellness claims.
A piece about Oprah's favorite weighted vest could become wellness journalism if it included, for example, research from exercise scientists on how weighted vests improve bone density or cardiovascular fitness, or if it examined whether ice cream makers help people meet nutritional goals. But a discount announcement doesn't meet that threshold.
I'd be happy to summarize wellness articles that contain: - Named researchers or practitioners - Peer-reviewed studies or clinical data - Health mechanisms or evidence - Expert commentary on efficacy - Original reporting on wellness topics
Do you have another article you'd like me to review?