Trust and safety
What therapist-reviewed journal prompts mean at Journal Party
Journal Party labels sensitive-topic programs that have been reviewed by licensed therapists or mental health professionals. The app supports reflection, not therapy.
Therapist-reviewed is a label for sensitive-topic programs
Journal Party uses therapist-reviewed language carefully. It applies to programs that touch sensitive mental-health-adjacent topics and have been reviewed by licensed therapists or mental health professionals.
It does not mean every prompt on the platform is clinical content, and it does not turn a journaling session into therapy.
What review is meant to support
Professional review helps Journal Party avoid careless framing around topics like grief, stress, self-worth, burnout, and emotional reflection. It supports safer language, clearer boundaries, and more thoughtful prompt design.
The purpose is to make guided reflection feel more responsible for everyday journalers, especially when a program touches vulnerable material.
- Sensitive-topic framing is checked for care and clarity.
- Programs should avoid positioning journaling as a substitute for clinical care.
- Advisory-approved programs are labeled in the product experience.
The boundary: journaling is not therapy
Journal Party can support personal reflection and habit-building, but it is not a therapy provider, crisis resource, diagnostic tool, or medical service.
If someone is in crisis or needs mental health treatment, they should seek appropriate professional or emergency support rather than relying on a journaling app.
Frequently asked questions
Are all Journal Party prompts therapist-reviewed?
No. Journal Party labels sensitive-topic programs that have been reviewed. General creative, habit, or lifestyle prompts may not carry that label.
Who reviews sensitive-topic programs?
Sensitive-topic programs may be reviewed by licensed therapists or mental health professionals connected to Journal Party advisory review workflows.
Does therapist-reviewed mean therapy?
No. Therapist-reviewed content can support safer reflection prompts, but Journal Party does not provide therapy, diagnosis, treatment, or medical advice.