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The Peptide Clinic Checklist: What to Ask Before You Start

A practical checklist for comparing online peptide clinics, review standards, and pharmacy sourcing before intake.

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A practical checklist for comparing online peptide clinics, review standards, and pharmacy sourcing before intake.

The problem is not that people are curious

People are not looking up peptides because everything feels fine. They are usually trying to make sense of fatigue, weight change, recovery, libido, skin, inflammation chatter, or a lab result that does not match how they feel.

The problem is what the internet hands them next: unclear sourcing, copied dosing advice, anonymous charts, and clinics that make every compound sound like the same answer in a different bottle.

Start with what gets reviewed

Before asking whether a peptide is interesting, ask what information a clinician reviews, how pharmacy sourcing works, and how follow-up questions are handled. A serious clinic should make intake, medication history, contraindications, and support part of the process.

If the path feels like a supplement checkout with medical language added later, slow down. Prescription decisions should not be hidden behind a quiz that never mentions review standards.

Five questions worth asking

Ask whether a licensed clinician reviews your history. Ask which pharmacy fulfills prescriptions if a clinician prescribes. Ask how instructions are communicated. Ask what follow-up looks like if something feels off. Ask what the clinic will not offer and why.

A good answer should be specific and easy to understand. You are looking for clear ownership, not a performance.

What Compound Health helps clarify

Compound Health is for adults who want to compare specific options with plain-language guidance, health-history review, and pharmacy sourcing in one place.

Educational resources can help you ask sharper questions. They do not replace medical advice, diagnosis, or an individualized prescribing decision.

This article is educational and is not medical advice, diagnosis, or a substitute for individualized clinician review.