Is Your Clinic “YMYL” Safe? How to Improve E-E-A-T Signals to Protect Your Rankings from Google Updates

If you run a medical clinic, medspa, or cosmetic practice, this topic applies to you more than you may realize.

Your website is not evaluated the same way as a salon, café, or local trades business. In the eyes of Google, your site falls under a special category called YMYL. That classification changes how your content is judged and how easily it can rank.

From our experience working with clinics, many ranking drops are not caused by bad SEO. They are caused by missing trust signals.

What Does “YMYL” Mean and Why It Applies to Your Clinic

YMYL stands for Your Money or Your Life.

Google uses this label for websites that can influence a person’s:

  • Health
  • Safety
  • Financial wellbeing

Medical clinics fall under YMYL because you:

  • Perform medical or semi-medical procedures
  • Publish health-related information
  • Influence treatment decisions that carry real risk

This means Google applies stricter quality standards to your content before it ranks.

Simply put, keywords are not enough.

What Is E-E-A-T?

E-E-A-T is the framework Google uses to decide whether a YMYL website can be trusted. It helps Google evaluate not just what your content says, but who is behind it and how reliable it is.

For medical clinics, E-E-A-T is especially important because your content influences real health decisions. Google needs strong signals that your information is accurate, responsible, and written by qualified professionals.

E-E-A-T stands for:

Experience

This refers to real, first-hand involvement in the treatments you discuss.

For clinics, this includes:

  • Hands-on clinical practice
  • Treating real patients
  • Understanding outcomes, risks, and aftercare

Content written or reviewed by practitioners who actively perform treatments carries more weight than purely theoretical explanations.

Expertise

Expertise reflects formal knowledge and medical training.

For medspa clinics, this means:

  • Recognised medical or clinical qualifications
  • Ongoing professional education
  • Training specific to the procedures you offer

Google expects health-related content to be supported by proven expertise, not general wellness advice.

Authoritativeness

Authoritativeness looks at whether your clinic and clinicians are recognised as credible sources.

This is signalled by:

  • Clear professional roles and credentials
  • Consistent authorship across your content
  • Associations, registrations, or professional memberships

Authority is built over time, but it must be visible for Google to assess it.

Trustworthiness

Trustworthiness focuses on transparency and accuracy.

Strong trust signals include:

  • Clear business details and contact information
  • Honest, evidence-based claims
  • Up-to-date and well-maintained content

For YMYL sites, trust is not assumed. It must be demonstrated clearly and consistently across your website.

Why E-E-A-T Matters More for Medical Clinics

In non-medical industries, Google can be flexible. In healthcare-related niches, it is not.

When someone searches:

  • “Is laser hair removal permanent?”
  • “Does microneedling tighten skin?”
  • “Is HIFU safe for the face?”

Google must be confident that the answers come from qualified professionals.

We’ve seen clinics with excellent service pages struggle because Google could not verify who was providing the information.

The “Generic Admin” Mistake

One of the most common issues we uncover during clinic website audits is content published under vague author names, such as:

  • “Admin”
  • “Website Team”
  • “Site Owner”

This may seem harmless, but for YMYL websites, anonymous or generic authorship is a serious trust problem.

Google expects health-related content to be written or reviewed by identifiable, qualified individuals. When no real author is attached, Google cannot determine whether the information comes from someone with medical knowledge or clinical experience.

As a result, anonymous authorship gives Google no way to assess:

  • Clinical experience
  • Medical or professional qualifications
  • Accountability for the accuracy of the content

We’ve seen clinics with well-written, factually correct articles struggle to rank simply because the content was attributed to “Admin.” The information itself was not the issue. The lack of a credible author was.

Even accurate content loses authority when no real person stands behind it.

The Fix: Use Real Authors With Medical Credentials

Every educational article should be attributed to a real clinician or practitioner.

At a minimum, an author bio should include:

  • Full name
  • Clinical role
  • Qualifications (MD, RN, BSc, etc.)
  • Years of experience
  • Registration or license numbers, where relevant

From our own experience, simply fixing authorship has helped clinics recover visibility without rewriting their content. The trust signal alone made the difference.

Citing Your Sources: Supporting Medical Claims Properly

Medical clinic content often includes performance claims, safety explanations, and outcome expectations. For YMYL websites, Google expects these statements to be backed by credible evidence, not marketing language. Proper sourcing helps demonstrate accuracy, responsibility, and clinical integrity.

Why Uncited Claims Hurt Trust

Statements such as:

  • “Laser reduces hair growth by 80%”
  • “Microneedling increases collagen”

are medical claims, not opinions.

When these claims are published without references, Google cannot verify their accuracy. As a result, the content is treated as unsupported and lower in trust, even if the information is commonly accepted within the industry.

For YMYL sites, lack of citations weakens Trustworthiness and Expertise signals.

Using Clinical Studies and Manufacturer References

Linking to reputable sources shows that your content is evidence-based and responsibly written.

Strong sources include:

  • Peer-reviewed clinical studies
  • Manufacturer whitepapers or treatment guidelines
  • Recognized medical or dermatology publications

This approach mirrors how trusted reference sites operate. It signals to Google that your clinic values accuracy, transparency, and patient safety over promotional claims, strengthening your E-E-A-T signals without overwhelming the reader.

Auditing Your “About Us” Page for Trust Signals

Your About page is one of the strongest E-E-A-T signals on your site.

For medical, it should clearly show:

  • Who owns the clinic
  • Who performs treatments
  • Their qualifications and experience

Include:

  • Real staff photos
  • Full names and titles
  • Clear clinic location and contact details

In our audits, clinics with vague About pages consistently underperform, even when their service pages are strong.

Quick Win: Audit Your Footer for Compliance and Transparency

This is a simple action you can take today.

Check whether your footer displays:

  • Registered business address
  • Phone number
  • Email contact
  • Regulatory or association logos

If any are missing, add them.

This strengthens trust signals across every page on your website.

Final Takeaway: Protecting Rankings Through Trust, Not Keywords Alone

Google updates don’t penalize clinics randomly. They expose trust gaps.

Clinics that use real medical authors, show credentials clearly, cite credible sources, and stay transparent are more stable in search results.

E-E-A-T is how Google decides which clinics are safe to recommend. We help clinics strengthen these trust signals so rankings are built on credibility, not guesswork.