Legal
Last updated: May 2, 2026
Our commitment
Anatomy of a Clinician: Built to Practice is committed to making clinical reasoning content accessible to clinicians and learners with disabilities. Accessibility is part of the standard, not an afterthought.
We design and build with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 Level AA as the working standard, and we treat accessibility issues as legitimate defects worth fixing.
Standards we align with
Our accessibility commitment aligns with widely-recognized digital-accessibility standards:
- WCAG 2.2 Level AA — current Web Content Accessibility Guidelines from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C); our primary working standard
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Title III — accessibility expectations for U.S. public accommodations
- Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act — used as a reference standard for digital accessibility, even though we are not a federal contractor
- European Accessibility Act (EAA) — applicable to certain commercial digital services accessible from the European Union as of June 2025
What this means in practice
- Semantic HTML structure with proper heading hierarchy on every page
- Sufficient color contrast for body text and interactive elements
- Keyboard navigation support throughout the site
- Visible focus indicators on links, buttons, and form fields
- Descriptive link text that makes sense out of context
- Alt text on meaningful images
- Form labels and error messages associated with their inputs
- Page content that reflows on small screens without horizontal scrolling
Known limitations
The site is built on WordPress.com with a custom block-based theme. We continue to audit components as they are added, and we treat any reported barrier as a defect that should be fixed. Areas that may not yet meet our target standard:
- Some third-party embeds and plugin-rendered components may lag behind our internal accessibility standards
- Complex tables in clinical reference content are being reviewed for screen reader landmark structure and cell-level navigation
- Older blog posts may not yet have alt text on every image
If you encounter a specific barrier, we want to know about it.
Reporting an accessibility issue
If something on this site is not accessible to you, email accessibility@anatomyofaclinician.com with:
- The page or feature where the issue occurred
- What you were trying to do
- What happened or didn’t happen
- The assistive technology you were using if relevant (screen reader, voice control, magnifier, etc.)
We respond to accessibility reports as a priority. The standard is the same one we apply to clinical content: if something is wrong, we want to fix it.
Continuing improvement
This statement reflects our current state and our ongoing commitment. As the platform grows — courses, additional reference content, structured assessment products — accessibility review is part of every release, not a final pass at the end.
Contact
Accessibility-related questions or feedback: accessibility@anatomyofaclinician.com.
Related
- Privacy Policy — how we collect, use, and protect personal information
- Educational Disclaimer — content scope, certification claims, sourcing
- Medical Disclaimer — no medical advice, no provider-patient relationship
- Terms of Use — agreement to use this site
- Refund and Cancellation Policy — refunds, cancellations, subscription terms