How we research, write, and review the content on this site - our commitment to accuracy, evidence-based sourcing, honest assessment, and full transparency about affiliate relationships.
Every claim about how an ingredient works is grounded in published research, and we cite PubMed sources so you can verify them yourself. When the evidence is strong, we say so; when it's limited, preliminary, or based on doses different from what a product contains, we say that too. We'd rather give you an honest "the research is mixed" than a confident overstatement.
We rely on peer-reviewed studies (prioritizing human research, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses), official product labels and manufacturer information, and established health and scientific resources. We're cautious about marketing materials, treating manufacturer claims as starting points to verify rather than facts to repeat. Ingredient doses are taken directly from the published Supplement Facts label.
Our core editorial principle is that you're better served by honest assessment than by sales copy. That means we highlight genuine strengths and real limitations alike. For Memocept, for instance, we're clear that it's a legitimately-made, transparent product built on a real circulation mechanism - and equally clear that it's fundamentally a nitric-oxide formula whose cognitive benefit is indirect, with modest doses and no clinical trials of the finished product. Both halves of that picture matter.
This site contains affiliate links, and we may earn a commission when you purchase through them, at no additional cost to you. This is how we fund the site. We disclose this clearly. Critically, affiliate relationships never change our analysis: we flag limitations, name who shouldn't buy a product, and recommend talking to a doctor regardless of commercial impact. If our honest assessment is "this isn't right for you," that's what we'll say.
Our content is educational, not medical advice. We're not a substitute for a relationship with a qualified healthcare provider. We consistently encourage readers to consult their own doctor before starting any supplement, and we're especially careful to flag safety considerations - like the fact that the nitric-oxide ingredients in Memocept lower blood pressure and can interact with certain medications.
We're committed to accuracy and we update content as new information emerges. If you spot an error, please email support@memoscept.com and we'll review and correct it promptly. We'd rather fix a mistake than defend one.