How to Evaluate a Peptide Clinic or Telehealth Provider
An evidence-based, vendor-neutral legitimacy framework for assessing peptide clinics, compounding pharmacies, and telehealth platforms using five verifiable public layers.
Consumer Protection is a recurring topic in our peptide coverage. This hub collects every article tagged Consumer Protection, newest first, each evidence-graded and tied to real, verifiable sources.
An evidence-based, vendor-neutral legitimacy framework for assessing peptide clinics, compounding pharmacies, and telehealth platforms using five verifiable public layers.
Consumer Protection is a topic our editors cover across the site. This hub aggregates the related, evidence-graded guidance.
This hub updates automatically whenever a new article is tagged Consumer Protection, so the latest coverage appears first.
Yes. Every article here grades its efficacy claims A-D and cites real, verifiable studies, regulatory documents or trial registries.
The majority of compounds documented here are not approved by the FDA for human use. Approved drugs (e.g. semaglutide, tirzepatide) are noted explicitly and require a licensed prescriber.
Many peptides — including BPC-157 and GHK-Cu in injectable form — are sold strictly "for research use only — not for human consumption." Purity, identity, and dosing of such products are not regulated or guaranteed.
Several compounds are banned in competitive sport under the WADA Prohibited List. Athletes risk sanction regardless of intent or formulation.
Always consult a qualified, licensed healthcare professional before considering any compound. Individual risk depends on your full medical context.
This content is for informational and educational purposes only · No physician–patient relationship is created · Evidence grades reflect published data as of the stated revision and may change.