Postpartum protocol inside Unfair is the logging and review context for users in the postpartum period, framed strictly as a record-keeping and clinician-prep workflow and not as guidance on what to take, restart, or avoid after birth.
Strict scope
Postpartum decisions about medications and supplements are clinical decisions. Unfair does not provide recommendations in this window. The logging context is meant to keep the user's existing record coherent and to make clinician visits easier. The complete supplement stacks guide frames the broader idea that Unfair is a journaling and review tool rather than a prescriber.
Why this is its own marker
Postpartum recovery can involve rapidly shifting sleep, mood, recovery from delivery, and changing medications. Day-to-day comparisons made against an earlier baseline can mislead. A profile-level marker keeps review screens from running stale comparisons.
What is suppressed in this state
When the postpartum marker is active, Unfair turns off non-essential stack experimentation prompts and emphasizes safety consent and the contraindication review surface. Review groupings shift to long rolling windows. The app stays available as a journal and does not push the user to add or restart anything.
What logging is still useful for
A clinician visit goes faster when the user can show what is currently being taken, what was paused, what symptoms appeared, and when. The journal supports that prep workflow. Lactation context is treated as a clinician topic, not a stack-optimization topic.
Mental health and safety
Mood, sleep, and energy notes in the postpartum window can carry safety meaning. In Unfair, postpartum context shifts the content away from stack optimization and toward conservative record-keeping for clinician conversations.
How this appears in Unfair
A postpartum marker is a profile-level setting. Stack experimentation prompts are quieted, safety review surfaces are emphasized, and review windows widen.
Clinical safety note
This entry is not postpartum care. Medication, lactation, and new-symptom questions sit outside supplement glossary interpretation.