Health Misinformation is Everywhere
Supplement companies, wellness blogs, and "biohacking" influencers make bold claims. But how much is backed by real science?
Cherry-Picked Studies
Sites cite one favorable study while ignoring ten that show no effect.
Mouse Studies as Proof
Animal studies extrapolated to humans without proper clinical trials.
Exaggerated Benefits
"Reverses aging" when the study showed a 5% improvement in one biomarker.
How Claim Validation Works
Automated fact-checking so you don't have to
Paste URL
Enter the URL of any health, supplement, or longevity website.
Claim Extraction
All verifiable health claims on the page are identified.
Literature Search
Each claim is validated against peer-reviewed literature.
Get Report
Receive a detailed credibility report with evidence levels.
Evidence-Based Scoring
Every claim is rated based on the quality and quantity of supporting research
Strong
5+ studies, consistent results
Moderate
3+ studies with support
Limited
1-2 studies, needs more
Insufficient
No supporting research
Contradicted
Evidence says otherwise
Who Uses Claim Validator?
Health-Conscious Consumers
Before buying supplements, verify the company's claims aren't just marketing hype.
Healthcare Professionals
When patients ask about supplements they saw online, quickly assess the evidence.
Researchers & Journalists
Quickly fact-check claims for articles or investigations into health misinformation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of claims can you validate?
We focus on health and longevity claims, including: supplement efficacy, biomarker effects, disease prevention claims, anti-aging claims, and treatment outcomes. We don't validate claims outside our evidence database.
How accurate is the validation?
Our evidence ratings are based on peer-reviewed scientific publications. Claim extraction has high accuracy but may occasionally miss nuanced claims. We recommend human review for critical decisions.
Can I validate my own company's website?
Absolutely! Many supplement companies use our tool to audit their own marketing claims before publishing. This helps ensure compliance and builds trust with customers.
What if a claim isn't in your database?
If we can't find relevant research for a claim, it will be marked as "insufficient evidence." This doesn't mean the claim is false - just that there isn't enough peer-reviewed research to validate it.