Why Boswell publishes guides
Peptide therapy search results are crowded with research-chemical sellers, forum protocols, clinic marketing, and social-media claims. Boswell's content is meant to slow that decision down. We explain what a compound is, where the evidence is stronger or weaker, what a prescription pathway changes, and what questions a patient should take to a licensed provider.
We write for people who are already researching peptide care and need help separating prescription medication, compounded medication, FDA-approved drug products, supplements, and products labeled for research use only.
How Boswell describes care
Boswell is a telehealth platform that connects patients with independent licensed medical providers and licensed U.S. pharmacy partners. Prescription medications require provider evaluation, and compounded medications are prepared for an individual patient when a provider determines they are appropriate.
We do not present research-only vials as patient-ready medications. We avoid dosing instructions for people who have not been prescribed a medication, and we direct individual safety questions to the treating provider.
How we keep content useful
- We cite primary or high-authority sources when making medical, regulatory, or pharmacy claims.
- We distinguish FDA-approved drug products from compounded medications and research materials.
- We avoid guaranteed outcomes, miracle language, and unsupported timelines.
- We update pages when regulation, availability, safety information, or the Boswell care model changes materially.
- We do not add review or rating schema unless matching reviews are real and visible on the page.
What our content does not do
Boswell's public guides are educational. They are not medical advice, diagnosis, treatment instructions, or a substitute for a consultation with a licensed clinician who can review your health history, medications, labs, and goals.
If you see a claim that looks unclear, outdated, or too broad, email hello@joinboswell.com. We would rather tighten the language than overstate what the evidence can support.