Review status

EverPrime is formalizing named medical review for public health content.

Our supplement articles are evidence-led and citation-backed, but they should not be read as personal medical advice. We are recruiting licensed clinicians with supplement, pharmacy, nutrition, or integrative-care expertise to review high-risk interaction and safety content before reviewer names appear on article bylines.

Reviewer criteria

  • Licensed MD, DO, PharmD, RD, ND, or equivalent regulated credential.
  • Clear public identity and credential verification.
  • Comfort reviewing supplement evidence, interaction risk, and conservative wording.
  • No undisclosed supplement-company conflicts for reviewed topics.

What reviewers check

Review starts with safety-sensitive pages: medication interactions, high-dose nutrient exposures, pregnancy context, anticoagulant context, and content that could be mistaken for personal medical advice.

Each review asks whether the page separates human evidence from mechanistic or animal data, cites primary sources or high-quality institutional references, avoids treatment promises, and gives a practical next step that points readers back to their clinician when individual risk matters.

Current process

Until a named reviewer is attached, public articles are marked as pending medical review where appropriate. Claims are kept educational, sourced, and framed with uncertainty when evidence is limited.

Pages in scope first

Reviewer invitation

Credentialed clinicians, pharmacists, dietitians, and qualified nutrition professionals can review the public invitation and submit topic fit for the reviewer lane.

Open reviewer invitation

Review priorities

The public queue starts with medication-sensitive interactions, lab-test context, organ-safety considerations, and high-traffic education pages.

View review-priority queue

Editorial boundaries

Reviewers check practical claim strength, medication-sensitive warnings, source fit, and whether the page stays educational rather than diagnostic or prescriptive.

Read editorial policy
These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Generated with AI assistance. Always verify with a healthcare professional. Educational information only. Not a substitute for professional medical advice.