Marenova Quarterly operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter.
Every piece of content published by Marenova Quarterly begins with a documented rationale. Writers are required to identify the specific aspect of metabolic wellness they intend to address, the primary sources they will draw on, and any known limitations in the available evidence base.
This front-end framing reduces the likelihood of scope drift during drafting and ensures the published article accurately reflects the state of available peer-reviewed research rather than extrapolating beyond it.
Subject matter is assessed for its practical relevance to readers navigating questions about resting metabolism, meal timing, and daily energy expenditure patterns. Articles that speak to highly specific biochemical pathways without practical corollaries are generally declined at the proposal stage.
Writers submit a source list before drafting begins. Primary sources are peer-reviewed journals; secondary sources are clearly labelled. Anecdotal evidence is permissible only when framed explicitly as such.
First drafts are submitted with inline citations. The editorial team flags unsupported claims for revision before the review stage. Writers are given a single revision window.
Every article is passed to a second editor who has not read the brief or source list, ensuring the text stands independently. Structural and factual comments are returned to the writer.
Statistical claims and quantitative figures are verified against original source documents. Where sources disagree, the discrepancy is noted in the article or the claim is removed.
The managing editor performs a final pass for tone consistency, vocabulary alignment with the publication's register, and removal of any phrasing that overstates the available evidence. Word count is confirmed against the agreed brief.
Articles are published with a datestamp and author attribution. Where corrections are required post-publication, they are noted at the foot of the article with a timestamp indicating when the change was made. Reader-submitted corrections are acknowledged within 48 hours.
Peer-reviewed journals in nutritional science, exercise physiology, and metabolic research. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses are given priority weighting.
Nutritional guidance documents from established public health bodies, registered nutritional organisations, and evidence-informed wellness publications with editorial accountability.
Practitioner commentary, case observations, and observational accounts used strictly to contextualise primary data. Always explicitly labelled as contextual rather than evidentiary.
Marenova Quarterly's editorial focus centres on the relationship between everyday habits and long-term metabolic balance. The publication examines basal metabolic rate variability, thermic effect of food, adaptive thermogenesis, nutrient partitioning, and the interaction between movement patterns and resting metabolism.
Content within this scope includes: meal timing and its relationship to metabolic flexibility; the role of protein intake in supporting muscle mass and metabolic rate; calorie awareness frameworks; morning movement and metabolic activation; and long-term approaches to metabolic health maintenance.
Topics outside the scope of the publication include acute interventions, short-term weight-loss regimens, and any content that would require reference to specific conditions, substances regulated by governing bodies, or individual specialist presentations.
Marenova Quarterly is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body. No advertiser, sponsor, or commercial partner has editorial influence over article selection, framing, or conclusions.
Writers are required to declare any relevant commercial relationships at the point of brief submission. This includes employment by, consultancy for, or financial interest in any organisation whose products, services, or research areas intersect with the proposed article topic. Declarations are reviewed before the brief is approved.
Undisclosed conflicts identified post-publication result in the addition of a disclosure note at the article foot and, where the conflict materially affects the article's reliability, retraction. The editorial team's own commercial relationships are disclosed in the About section of this publication.
Articles published on Marenova Quarterly are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday wellness practices. The content is not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.
We recommend speaking with a qualified wellness or nutrition professional before introducing any new habit or routine to your daily life, particularly if you have specific dietary requirements.
Content published by Marenova Quarterly is selected based on published nutritional research and undergoes independent batch verification for quality and labelling accuracy.