Source quality

Supplement claims need source hierarchy, not citation decoration.

EverPrime ranks sources by how well they answer the practical question: safety, interaction context, form selection, timing, or evidence confidence. A citation only helps if it supports the exact claim being made.

Publication rule

If a health statement cannot be tied to a credible source or reframed as uncertainty, it does not belong in public EverPrime content.

Tier 1

Clinical guidance and government references

NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, NCCIH, FDA labels, MedlinePlus, and major clinical guidance sit at the top when the question is safety, interaction context, or practical consumer guidance.

Tier 2

Systematic reviews and position stands

Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and professional society position stands help frame confidence when they match the population, dose, form, and outcome under discussion.

Tier 3

Individual trials and mechanistic papers

Individual studies can explain a mechanism or timing rule, but EverPrime does not turn one positive abstract into a broad supplement recommendation.

Excluded

Marketing claims without source support

Brand pages, influencer protocols, and affiliate roundups are not treated as evidence unless they point back to verifiable primary or institutional sources.

Claim check

Four questions before a citation earns its place

1

Does the source match the supplement form and dose being discussed?

2

Does the claim describe an outcome the study actually measured?

3

Is the page about a general wellness claim or a medication-sensitive safety context?

4

Would a reader understand where evidence ends and clinician judgment begins?

Public-safe framing

EverPrime uses educational language, separates evidence confidence from personalized advice, and routes medication-sensitive contexts back to a qualified clinician or pharmacist.

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