The resource page is where the site shifts from orientation to reference. Visitors should be able to move from a broad concern to a specific source category quickly, whether they need clinical statements, practical care guidance, or examples of advocacy messaging.

Research Library

The core library should organize peer-reviewed studies by topic so readers do not need to search blindly. Categories from the sitemap include pain, function, complications, HIV, UTIs, ethics, and historical trends.

Practical Guides

Not every visitor needs journal articles first. Some need clear, simple instructions. This area should surface intact-care basics, developmental guidance, conversation scripts, and short FAQ-style answers.

  • Intact-care overview for parents and caregivers.
  • Normal development reference linked to the existing article page.
  • Clinician conversation prompts and second-opinion guidance.

Stories and Community Material

The sitemap also calls for personal stories and recovery-centered testimony. That content belongs here when a reader needs lived experience alongside research and advocacy framing.

How This Page Should Work

Organize for scanning first. Visitors should be able to choose “research,” “parent guide,” “professional material,” or “stories” in one click.

Downloads and Future Tools

As the project grows, this section can hold printable handouts, outreach packets, clinician one-pagers, and press resources. The structure on this page already reserves room for that expansion without changing the site’s main navigation.

A strong resource library lowers the cost of being accurate.

Best Use Cases

Send people here when they ask for sources, not just summaries. It is also the right destination for journalists, clinicians, and advocates who need categories, citations, or reusable reference material.