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PepTutor is research infrastructure, not medical care.

PepTutor is research infrastructure, not medical care. It synthesizes clinical literature, public community reports, practitioner-style discussion, and other fallible signal for trained practitioners, researchers, and technically literate adults. Anecdotes and scraped public reports are inputs for investigation, not sources of truth. Some compounds discussed here are research-only, unapproved, controlled, jurisdiction-dependent, or labeled not for human consumption; those labels are risk flags, not green lights. PepTutor does not sell, source, prescribe, or recommend use. Verify claims independently, check legality, and treat acute symptoms as real-world safety events.

Research Infrastructure, Not Care

PepTutor is an evidence-synthesis and reconnaissance tool. It does not diagnose, prescribe, treat, recommend use, interpret labs for an individual, or replace a licensed clinician.

Built For Trained Judgment

PepTutor is written for trained practitioners, researchers, and technically literate adults who can evaluate evidence quality, risk, legality, and uncertainty. It should not be treated as coaching for unsupervised experimentation.

Fallibility Is Part Of The Output

PepTutor preserves clinical literature, public community reports, practitioner-style discussion, scraped or transcribed material, and other messy signal. Anecdotes, forum reports, and practitioner commentary are inputs for investigation, not sources of truth. Uncertainty, disagreement, and incompleteness are part of the output.

Research-Only Is A Risk Flag

Some compounds discussed here are experimental, unapproved, controlled, jurisdiction-dependent, labeled research-only, or labeled not for human consumption. Those labels do not make human use legal, safe, or endorsed. PepTutor does not sell, source, prescribe, or tell you to consume them.

User Responsibility And Real-World Risk

Verify claims independently, check legality in your jurisdiction, understand source quality, and treat acute symptoms, suspected adverse reactions, or serious safety questions as real-world events, not prompts.