Guides

Writer Brief: Guides Hub

Content status: Hub writer brief only. Replace this brief with final hub copy before public launch if editorial instructions should not be visible.

1. Page Purpose

Serve as the broad medicine education hub for practical guides, symptom pages, first-aid guidance and South African pharmacy literacy content. This hub has 199 planned child pages in the import and should help readers move to the most specific page rather than trying to answer every query in full.

Planned URL: https://uses.co.za/guides/
Page type: Level 1 structural hub page
Parent: None

2. Target Reader

Readers who need help understanding medicine use, pharmacy access, symptoms, labels, storage, first aid or safe self-care decisions.

3. Primary Keyword

medicine guides South Africa

4. Secondary Keywords / Supporting Terms

  • medicine advice South Africa
  • safe medicine use
  • pharmacy guide
  • symptom medicine guide
  • medicine education

5. Recommended H1

Guides

6. Recommended Meta Title

Guides | Uses.co.za

7. Recommended Meta Description

Writer brief for the Guides hub: navigation, page structure, internal links, safety notes and SEO guidance for Uses.co.za.

8. Suggested Page Structure

H1: Guides

  • H2: What Guides covers
  • H2: How readers should use this hub
  • H2: Priority subtopics and child pages
  • H2: Safety and medical review guidance
  • H2: Internal linking and navigation guidance
  • H2: FAQ and next-step guidance

9. Section-by-Section Writing Guidance

What Guides covers

  • Define the scope of the Guides section and tell readers this is a navigation hub for planned supporting pages.
  • Keep the introduction concise and practical; do not provide medicine-specific dosing or diagnosis on the hub.
  • Use South African context where schedule, pharmacy access or medicine safety is relevant, but verify any access claims before publishing.

How readers should use this hub

  • Explain how to choose the next page by symptom, active ingredient, branded medicine, schedule, safety concern or comparison intent.
  • Use short summaries and clear link labels rather than long paragraphs that duplicate child pages.
  • Make it clear that personal suitability depends on age, health conditions, pregnancy/breastfeeding, other medicines and professional advice.

Priority subtopics and child pages

  • Represent the planned mix of page types under this hub: Symptom / Condition Guide: 74; Medicine Literacy / Education Guide: 64; Safety / Interaction Guide: 23; Schedule / Access Explainer: 19; First-Aid / Practical Guide: 18; Chronic Medicine Guide: 1.
  • Group navigation around the strongest clusters where helpful: Medicine Access, Schedules & South African Pharmacy Rules: 34; Skin, Fungal & Topical Medicines: 30; Antibiotics & Infection Medicines: 24; Pain, Fever & Anti-inflammatory Medicines: 23; Cold, Flu, Cough & Sinus: 22; Antiseptics, Wounds & First Aid: 21.
  • Prioritise high-intent or safety-critical child pages in navigation modules, but keep every link contextual and useful.

Safety and medical review guidance

  • Use cautious wording such as “may”, “commonly used for” and “ask a pharmacist or doctor”.
  • Do not imply that browsing the hub is a substitute for professional advice, emergency care, or the medicine leaflet.
  • Flag that medicine-specific articles should be medically or pharmacy reviewed before publishing.

Internal linking and navigation guidance

  • Link from the hub to high-priority child pages using descriptive anchors based on the child page topic.
  • Child pages should link back to this hub where relevant and also to related ingredient, brand, comparison, schedule, interaction or safety pages from the planned architecture.
  • Avoid linking to directory placeholders or unplanned URLs.

Internal Link Suggestions

Use these planned internal links contextually in the final copy. Do not add unplanned URLs, placeholder links, or self-links.

11. Conversion / User Action Guidance

Encourage readers to choose the most specific next page, check medicine labels and safety warnings, compare relevant options cautiously, and ask a pharmacist or doctor when personal suitability is uncertain.

12. FAQ Suggestions

  • What can I find in the Guides section?
    Explain that the hub organises planned pages and helps readers navigate to more specific guidance.
  • How should I choose the right guides page?
    Guide readers to choose by symptom, ingredient, brand, schedule, safety concern or comparison need.
  • Should I ask a pharmacist or doctor before using medicine?
    Yes, where symptoms are serious, the reader has health conditions, uses other medicines, is pregnant/breastfeeding, or is unsure what is suitable.
  • Are these pages a substitute for the medicine leaflet?
    No. Final pages should tell readers to check the leaflet and ask a qualified professional for personal guidance.
  • When should I seek urgent medical help?
    Give category-relevant red flags and advise urgent help for severe, worsening, unusual or emergency symptoms.

13. Content Notes

  • Hub depth: This page should function as an index and decision-routing page, not a full substitute for each child article.
  • Anti-cannibalisation: Summarise child topics briefly and link through; do not repeat each child page’s detailed answer.
  • Compliance: Verify South African schedule/access claims against current official sources before final publication.
  • Do not include: personalised diagnosis, personalised dose instructions, unsupported availability claims or promotional wording.

Disclaimer for final hub: Information only and not a substitute for medical advice. Readers should check the medicine leaflet and ask a pharmacist, doctor or qualified healthcare professional for personal guidance.