Reviewer · KimchiGuide
Dr. James Cho MD, FACG
Gastroenterologist · Gut Microbiome Specialist · Medical Content Reviewer · San Francisco, CA
“As a gastroenterologist, I see patients every week who have read something online about kimchi or fermented foods and either over-relied on it or dismissed it entirely. My role here is simple: make sure what KimchiGuide publishes is something I would say to a patient sitting across from me.”
What a Medical Reviewer Does — and Why It Matters
Every health and nutrition article on KimchiGuide goes through a two-stage process: written by Dr. Sarah Mitchell (RD, PhD) and then independently reviewed by Dr. James Cho before publication. This is not a formality — it is a clinical check.
From Johns Hopkins to Gut Microbiome Research — James’s Journey
I trained at Johns Hopkins and completed my gastroenterology fellowship at UCSF, where the emerging science of the gut microbiome was becoming impossible to ignore. By 2018, patients were regularly arriving with printouts about kimchi, kefir, and kombucha — often citing articles that overstated the evidence. I started tracking which online resources were accurate. Most weren’t. KimchiGuide was one that was.
What Dr. Cho Reviews & Specialises In
My Medical Review Process — Step by Step
This is the same critical appraisal process I use when evaluating literature for clinical practice — applied to every KimchiGuide health article.
- 1Read every cited source — not just the abstractMost medical errors in health content come from abstract-only reading. I check the methods section, the sample size, the control conditions, and the funding disclosure of every paper cited in the article. A 2021 study with 36 participants and industry funding is not the same as a 2023 Cochrane review.
- 2Check that the claim matches what the study actually measuredThe most common error in nutrition media. A study measuring microbiome diversity markers does not prove an immunity benefit. A study showing weight loss in Korean participants over 4 weeks does not generalise to all populations. I flag every mismatch between claim and evidence.
- 3Add clinical context for patient populationsI identify where the article needs a caveat for specific populations: sodium-restricted patients, immunocompromised individuals, those on certain medications, or those with active inflammatory bowel disease. These details rarely appear in general nutrition writing. They appear in mine.
- 4Confirm the medical disclaimer is appropriateEvery health article must carry a disclaimer that is specific — not generic. “This is not medical advice” is insufficient. The disclaimer should indicate what kind of reader should consult a physician before acting on this information.
- 5Sign off — name, credential, dateMy name on an article means I have read it, checked the sources, and would stand behind its clinical accuracy if asked by a colleague or patient. The date means the article was accurate as of that review — and it is scheduled for re-review if significant new literature emerges.
Professional Profiles & Verified Listings
Dr. Cho maintains verified professional profiles across medical platforms. All clinical credentials are independently verifiable through the American Board of Internal Medicine and the American College of Gastroenterology member directory.
What Dr. Cho’s Review Guarantees
Articles Reviewed by Dr. Cho
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Editorial & Professional Contact
Credential Verification: Dr. Cho’s board certification can be independently verified through the American Board of Internal Medicine and the American College of Gastroenterology member directory.
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