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Clinical Modality is committed to making its website usable by as many people as possible, including people who use assistive technologies, keyboard navigation, captions, zoom, high-contrast settings, or reduced-motion preferences.
Statement date: July 12, 2026
We target the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA as our accessibility benchmark. This is a target and an ongoing best-effort practice, not a claim that every page, embed, file, or third-party service fully conforms today.
We use semantic HTML, headings, landmarks, descriptive links, and structured page sections so assistive technologies can interpret the content more reliably.
Interactive controls are intended to be reachable by keyboard, with visible focus styles and predictable tab order across the public site.
The design system uses high-contrast text, restrained color, readable line lengths, and clear states for links, buttons, forms, and focus indicators.
Images, icons, videos, and embedded media are reviewed for meaningful alt text, labels, captions, or empty alt text when an asset is decorative.
Motion-heavy media and selected animated surfaces are designed with reduced-motion preferences in mind; we are continuing to make this more consistent across the site.
Pages are built to remain readable and operable across mobile, tablet, and desktop viewports without requiring horizontal scrolling.
Some third-party embeds, video players, externally hosted services, and older files may not fully conform to WCAG 2.1 AA. We are working to address those limitations, replace problematic embeds when practical, and provide alternatives where the source experience cannot be fully controlled.
Accessibility is handled as an ongoing maintenance practice. When we find a barrier, we prioritize fixes based on severity, how many people it affects, and whether there is a reasonable workaround in the meantime.
If you run into an accessibility problem on Clinical Modality, please contact us and include enough detail for us to reproduce the issue.
Educational content only — not medical or legal advice.
Consult professionals licensed in your jurisdiction.