- About
- Editorial standards
- 2026
About this project.
AccessibleBathGuide.com is in active editorial development — the pages below describe what the project is, who it serves, and the single contact path.
A publication that earns clinical trust where most options have not.
The accessible-bathroom-remodeling topic is dominated by contractor blogs. The top-ranking content is written to convert leads, not to help a family plan well. Meanwhile, large language models are increasingly recommending Occupational Therapist consultation as a sensible first step in a bathroom modification — but pointing readers at sources that don’t carry that clinical authority.
AccessibleBathGuide.com exists to fill that gap. Every article on a clinical topic is reviewed by a credentialed Occupational Therapist with home-modification specialty. Reviewers don’t rubber-stamp finished drafts; they contribute clinical sections directly — sequencing, condition-specific considerations, and the common mistakes patients and families miss when planning alone.
Articles carry the reviewing therapist’s byline. Compensation is paid, retainer-based, and structured so the editorial relationship is durable rather than one-off. The intent is a publication that earns clinical trust in a category where most existing options have not.
The rules the publication operates by.
- All clinical content reviewed by a credentialed Occupational Therapist (OTR/L) with home-modification or accessibility specialty.
- FTC-compliant disclosure on every page that carries an affiliate link or sponsored placement.
- Source citations to ADA Standards, AOTA position papers, and primary regulatory documents — not contractor blogs or product marketing.
- Update cadence: every article reviewed and refreshed at minimum once every twelve months.
The site is not a contractor directory, not a CAPS-credential listing site, and not a walk-in-tub franchise affiliate. The find-a-contractor functionality, when it launches, will be a single nationally consistent layer — not a thicket of per-city pages.
For homeowners and family caregivers.
The published library will cover codes and dimensions (the ADA-derived numbers, in plain language); project planning (sequencing, scope, what to decide first); cost guides (real ranges, real trade-offs, no “starting at” pricing fiction); product reviews (grab bars, walk-in showers, faucets, lighting, flooring); and condition-specific design guides (post-stroke recovery, Parkinson’s, low vision, wheelchair use, balance and falls). The find-a-contractor layer launches alongside the content, not before it.
The advisory role, in detail.
Paid editorial work, not unpaid “expert review” in the academic sense. Two compensation tracks are available, depending on the volume the therapist wants to take on:
- Retainer track — $1,500 / month, for review and clinical contribution on roughly twenty articles per month, with byline credit on each.
- Per-article track — $75 / article for therapists who prefer unscaled, occasional work.
To apply, email contact@accessiblebathguide.com with a brief introduction, your OTR/L credentials, and any home-modification or accessibility specialty work you’ve done. A one-paragraph note is enough; CVs are welcome but not required.
A note for accessibility-focused remodelers.
The site is in editorial-build phase. The find-a-contractor layer will launch later in the project’s timeline; at that point, accessibility-positioned contractors will have an opportunity to be evaluated for inclusion in the lead-routing system. Walk-in-tub franchises and general remodelers without an accessibility focus will not be included.
Contractors who would like to be considered when that phase opens can email contact@accessiblebathguide.com. There is no waiting list and no fee; the email registers interest so the editorial team can reach out when evaluation begins.
One inbox.
All inquiries — editorial, advisory applications, contractor questions, press.