Source-backed update detail
Article content, structured data, and related coverage are tied to reviewed sources.
Article content, structured data, and related coverage are tied to reviewed sources.
Published May 16, 2026
Source file: docs/generated/20260515-2330-andesvirus-ai-autopilot-rollout-plan.md
A phased production rollout plan for AndesVirus.ai covering indexing, fresh content, UI, monetization, performance, pSEO, trust, and automation governance.
This rollout turns AndesVirus.ai into a safer, fresher, and more scalable public-health content engine while preserving medical-disclaimer boundaries, source-backed publishing, and crawl-quality discipline.
> Medical disclaimer: AndesVirus.ai publishes public-health education only. It is not diagnosis, treatment, emergency guidance, or a replacement for official public-health authorities or medical professionals.
Priority: make every valuable page crawlable, canonicalized, internally linked, and represented in sitemap, feed, and structured data outputs. The production checks should include sitemap coverage, robots access, canonical consolidation, metadata completeness, schema coverage, and duplicate/thin-content detection before broad publishing accelerates.
Priority: publish source-backed updates that answer practical search intent, including symptoms, transmission, cleaning guidance, travel risk, outbreaks, prevention, and comparisons between Andes virus and broader hantavirus guidance. Generated articles should include official-source links, reviewed timestamps, clear uncertainty language, and FAQ sections.
Priority: present the site as an intelligence hub rather than a generic blog. The homepage, topic pages, and update pages should emphasize current status, official-source monitoring, freshness badges, disclaimers, and simple paths for readers who need symptoms, exposure guidance, cleaning guidance, or source links quickly.
Priority: improve AdSense readiness without making the site look spammy. Ads should be placed after meaningful content blocks, never before core safety guidance, and never in a way that could confuse paid content with medical or public-health recommendations.
Priority: protect speed while adding content volume. Keep scripts lazy where possible, limit layout shift from ads, use compressed images, keep pages mostly server-rendered, and run performance snapshots after large content or layout changes.
Priority: build topic clusters carefully instead of mass-producing thin pages. High-value clusters include symptoms, exposure scenarios, safe cleaning, travel, countries and regions, official sources, outbreak explainers, prevention, and commonly confused terms. Every pSEO page should have a distinct query target, useful answer, canonical URL, and internal links.
Priority: reinforce that this is public-health education, not medical advice. Every sensitive article should have official-source citations, a visible disclaimer, clear emergency-care language for severe breathing symptoms, and a reviewed timestamp. Avoid sensational outbreak wording and avoid unsupported case claims.
Priority: automate drafts, publication, localization, indexing sync, AdSense checks, trend reports, and performance snapshots with safe mode available. The system should fail closed: if sources are stale, claims are uncertain, or quality scores fall below threshold, drafts should remain unpublished until reviewed.
The site should publish fewer, better pages before scaling. The goal is durable search trust: source-backed answers, fast pages, clean metadata, strong internal links, and a public-health tone that stays useful without overstating risk.
1. Safe cleaning checklist for cabins, garages, sheds, and storage areas. 2. Andes virus versus other hantaviruses. 3. Early symptoms and when to seek urgent care. 4. Rodent exposure cleanup mistakes to avoid. 5. Travel-oriented Andes virus risk explainer. 6. Official-source directory for CDC, WHO, PAHO, and local health agencies.
No. Autopilot should publish only when source coverage, quality, metadata, disclaimers, and internal links pass production checks. Risk-sensitive or outbreak-specific claims should stay in draft when source confidence is low.
Use conservative, clearly separated ad placements after helpful content. Avoid intrusive ad density, misleading ad proximity near emergency guidance, or layouts that make ads look like official public-health advice.
Monitor sitemap health, newly published URLs, feed freshness, source freshness, content quality scores, AdSense script health, indexing sync status, and Core Web Vitals snapshots.
This update is informational and source-backed. It does not diagnose symptoms, estimate personal risk, or replace instructions from WHO, CDC, PAHO, local health authorities, or qualified clinicians.