Surely the journalist asked what qualifications the “clinician” had so they knew who regulated them.
TomHicksJnr on
I’ve read a few interesting articles on this topic recently – they are huge in America. They are sold with little regulation which means there’s no assurance of what you’re taking, how it was produced, what dose is safe or even if it actually reflects what’s on the label.
-Ardea- on
I would welcome some rigorous testing of these things, it’d be good to know if half the things claimed about them are true. BPC-157 looks quite promising but I can’t quite bring myself to pin something, at least without knowing the risks/benefits
AnnoyingCharlatan on
>The clinic said its peptides cost £350 a month for a single peptide and £450 a month for two, with the therapy provided in either a vial with a disposable syringe or, for an extra fee, in pre-loaded injection pen
As someone who has messed around with these, those prices are insane
4 commenti
The article used the term “clinician”.
Surely the journalist asked what qualifications the “clinician” had so they knew who regulated them.
I’ve read a few interesting articles on this topic recently – they are huge in America. They are sold with little regulation which means there’s no assurance of what you’re taking, how it was produced, what dose is safe or even if it actually reflects what’s on the label.
I would welcome some rigorous testing of these things, it’d be good to know if half the things claimed about them are true. BPC-157 looks quite promising but I can’t quite bring myself to pin something, at least without knowing the risks/benefits
>The clinic said its peptides cost £350 a month for a single peptide and £450 a month for two, with the therapy provided in either a vial with a disposable syringe or, for an extra fee, in pre-loaded injection pen
As someone who has messed around with these, those prices are insane