@nemah.co
1 post audited · 2 claims analysed
Science evidence grade
Based on 2 claims across 1 audit
2
Supported
100%
0
Overstated
0%
0
Misleading
0%
0
No Evidence
0%
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Claim-level evidence grades — not a character judgment. Methodology · Right of reply · Leaderboards
What @nemah.co claims actually are
We separate claims into three buckets: backed by evidence, factually incorrect, and grey — like animal-only findings sold as human fact (e.g. BPC-157 “fixes Achilles” from rat studies).
Evidence-based
100%
2 claims
Claims that align with published human or clinical evidence at the stated strength.
Ex: “Semaglutide can reduce body weight in adults with obesity” — supported by large RCTs.
Factually incorrect
0%
0 claims
Claims that conflict with the evidence, invent certainty, or omit critical safety/context in a misleading way.
Ex: “Peptides have no side effects” — contradicts known adverse-event profiles.
Grey / overstated
0%
0 claims
Plausible direction but wrong certainty — animal-only data sold as human fact, dose/effect overstated, or no adequate published support yet.
Ex: “BPC-157 fixes Achilles tears” — often rests on rodent tendon models, not proven human Achilles repair trials.
Evidence mix
Share of audited claims in each bucket
Verdict detail
Grey splits into overstated (wrong certainty) vs no published support
Claims over time
Stacked by bucket as audits land — plus the running evidence grade
Gold line = running science evidence grade (Supported + ½ Overstated ÷ total claims).
Audit history(1 post)
“If your stretch mark cream doesn’t have actives, it’s just lotion. Most belly creams only moisturize the surface. Our Revitalizing Stretch Mark Cream has Vanistryl® - a clinically-proven peptide that actually supports collagen production and improves elasticity.”
Vanistryl® lacks any identified scientific support in registered clinical trials, PubMed, or peer-reviewed literature for either collagen production or elasticity claims. Without evidence of the peptide's composition, mechanism, or any published research—human or preclinical—these claims cannot be evaluated against scientific standards. Consumers should request published evidence or clinical trial data from the manufacturer before accepting these claims.
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