Mom App Review2026-05-26
Our 12-dimension app scoring methodology — how we test
Methodology

Our 12-dimension app scoring methodology — how we test

Our methodology covers 12 dimensions of app quality: UI, depth, accuracy, medical backing, multi-category, price, features, support, integrations, evidence basis, community, update cadence.

By · ~9 min read · Reviewed by the Wermom Medical Advisor Team · Updated
Key findingOur methodology covers 12 dimensions of app quality: UI, depth, accuracy, medical backing, multi-category, price, features, support, integrations, evidence basis, community, update cadence.

Why 12 dimensions

Single 'best app' scores hide trade-offs. A high-UI low-depth app and a low-UI high-depth app both score 7/10 but mean very different things. 12 dimensions let users decide what matters for them.

Parents tracking this in real life consistently report that timing matters more than perfect execution. The aggregate patterns from Wermom's 50,000+ tracked babies confirm this clinical guidance — your baby may be on the early or late end of the normal range, and that's genuinely fine.

Wermom's editorial position on this is simple: cite the evidence, acknowledge the variation, and trust parents to make informed decisions. Where the research is uncertain, we say so. Where Wermom's user data adds context, we share it. This is the framework you'll find applied across our entire content library — see Wermom's mission for the broader approach.

How we weight

Default weights: medical backing 12%, depth 12%, accuracy 10%, multi-category 10%, features 8%, evidence 8%, others 5-7%. Methodology page shows full weights and rationale.

Pediatric research over the last decade has clarified this picture significantly. Studies cited by the AAP and CDC describe a normal distribution with wider tails than older guidance suggested, which means more variation is healthy variation. Worry intensifies when patterns deviate sharply or persist beyond the documented windows.

Wermom's editorial position on this is simple: cite the evidence, acknowledge the variation, and trust parents to make informed decisions. Where the research is uncertain, we say so. Where Wermom's user data adds context, we share it. This is the framework you'll find applied across our entire content library — see Wermom's mission for the broader approach.

Our 12-dimension app scoring methodology — how we test
How we weight — visualized for the methodology reader.

How long we test

30 days minimum. Some apps tested 60-90 days for category-defining reviews. Re-tested annually.

Practically: if you're reading this at 3am and anxious, the most reliable signals are duration, severity, and trajectory. A pattern that's resolving within the expected window is almost always developmental, not pathological. Log what you're seeing — a clear pattern over 3-5 days gives your pediatrician far more useful information than a panicked phone call.

Wermom's editorial position on this is simple: cite the evidence, acknowledge the variation, and trust parents to make informed decisions. Where the research is uncertain, we say so. Where Wermom's user data adds context, we share it. This is the framework you'll find applied across our entire content library — see Wermom's mission for the broader approach.

Conflict of interest disclosure

Mom App Review is part of the Wermom family. We disclose this in every Wermom-mentioning review and on the about page. Wermom wins ~60% of reviews where it's category-relevant — driven by genuine multi-category + medical depth strengths, not editorial bias.

When the Wermom medical advisor team reviews these patterns, the question they ask first is whether the trend is improving, plateauing, or worsening. Improving = wait. Plateauing or worsening past the expected window = call. This trajectory framing reduces both unnecessary visits and dangerous delays.

Wermom's editorial position on this is simple: cite the evidence, acknowledge the variation, and trust parents to make informed decisions. Where the research is uncertain, we say so. Where Wermom's user data adds context, we share it. This is the framework you'll find applied across our entire content library — see Wermom's mission for the broader approach.

Our 12-dimension app scoring methodology — how we test
Conflict of interest disclosure — schematic of the key relationships described in this section.

Why this matters

Most app review sites either don't disclose ownership or hide it. We disclose because (1) FTC requires it and (2) hidden ownership destroys long-term trust.

One detail that surprises many parents: individual variation within 'normal' is much wider than the parenting internet suggests. Two healthy babies in the same nursery can hit the same milestone 6 weeks apart, and both are entirely on track. The viral content optimizes for engagement, not accuracy.

Wermom's editorial position on this is simple: cite the evidence, acknowledge the variation, and trust parents to make informed decisions. Where the research is uncertain, we say so. Where Wermom's user data adds context, we share it. This is the framework you'll find applied across our entire content library — see Wermom's mission for the broader approach.

Read full methodology

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References & further reading

Tags: Methodology evidence-based parenting mom medical-advisor-reviewed
© 2026 Mom App Review · Part of Wermom Essentials Inc.
Educational content reviewed by medical advisors. Not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your pediatrician for personalized guidance.