Category · Wellness & supplements
NAD+, peptides, longevity programs — the evidence behind the marketing, when there is any.
What every review in this category answers
Many wellness products are sold on mechanism-of-action speculation, not human outcome data. We flag where the literature actually supports the claim and where it doesn't.
Peptide and NAD+ programs typically use compounding pharmacies. Quality varies. We track which providers use 503B-licensed compounders and which don't.
Many programs charge a premium for proprietary blends of generic supplements. We compare to off-the-shelf equivalents.
Some wellness programs prescribe peptides or hormone derivatives with minimal screening. We grade prescribing rigor.
Coming next in this category
We're publishing these in the order of what readers ask about most. If you want to know when a specific review goes live, drop us your email below and we'll send a one-time notification — no newsletter spam.
The evidence base
Human RCT evidence for most wellness-category interventions (NAD+ precursors, most peptides, ‘longevity’ protocols) is thin compared to FDA-approved drugs. That doesn't mean nothing works — it means we apply tighter scrutiny here. Our wellness reviews lead with the evidence base and the prescribing rigor, not the marketing science.
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