Elizabeth Yurth, M.D.
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
This has what it's in it.
It doesn't have any contaminants.
The problem is they're not held to the same standards as a compounding pharmacy.
So that COA, you could still have certain amounts of contaminants in it.
You can still have certain amounts of things like arsenic in it.
So the COA, you know, as long as it's below a threshold, they'll give you a COA that says it's fine.
But it's a different standard COA than what the compounding pharmacies use.
The other problem, and this is what's happening kind of all over in the physician world, is that these research facilities are making a peptide and they're sort of putting it onto the doctor.
So instead of saying this is a, so if you buy a research peptide, like you buy it from anywhere, peptide sciences, anywhere you want to go, it will say this is not for human use.
This is for research use only.
And that's to protect the person making it.
That's used at your own risk.
We told you it's not for human use.
It's for research only.
If you want to inject it yourself, blah, blah, blah.
We're not watching.
But that's what everybody does, right?
So the facilities are protecting themselves by saying, this is for research use only.
If you want to do anything you want with it, go ahead.
And everybody well knows that everybody is not using them for research.