I have used them for Rapamycin. A couple months ago I had a PHD from there message me to review my situation. He mentioned that my A1C was on the edge and after some discussion pointed out that SGLT2 would help with that. It seemed logical and I had built up some trust for them.
I ordered some and they had a doctor approve it without ever talking to me. A month later my historically low Triglycerides had shot up to over 350. My A1C came down ever so slightly.
I contacted them and the PHD decided to order me some labs further out. They showed that after stopping SGLT2 my labs returned to a normal healthier level.
Based upon a trust I ordered a 6 month supply. Of course they will not refund.
My concern is how loose they are with prescriptions. Where I perhaps wrongfully trusted them in the beginning, I now see them as a sales driven organization using the medical field. Once you buy a rapamycin they use the labs to push their other products. I get that, but not the minimal MD involvement.
I’ve used them and this wouldn’t cause me to go elsewhere. I appreciate that they’re pretty loose with prescriptions. They also bundle frequent blood tests, so you can quickly course-correct if there are problems, which is exactly what happened in this case. You always run the risk of a bad reaction when trying something new (I’ve had suboptimal reactions to other prescriptions when working fairly closely with an in-person doctor and I was similarly left with pills I’d paid for and had no plans to use). I knew that when buying my first 6 month rapamycin supply. I would have been miffed if I immediately had to stop it, but I also would have been miffed if, as expected, I has no issues and had originally bought only a month’s supply at a higher price per mg.
I use them but have become wary of their sales-oriented approach towards my health. They sometimes prescribe medications without proper screening. Also their interpretations of blood tests are not in line with what professional labs like Quest or LabCorp use for their reference guidelines. Often what Quest or LabCorp says is within the reference range Gethealthspan.com says is out of range. When challenged they haven’t revealed the source of their reference ranges. I think Quest or LabCorp are more reliable.
I had been using them for my first acarbose script when my India meds ran out. They skimped on the dosing 25mg/meal. Looked around and ended up with alot of big boy 100mg pills and good price, so it pays to shop. Early on I used them for rapamycin blood testing when I was first starting. And I’ve got them on my list for when my indian rapa runs out, also SGLT2 and oxytocin is tempting. So in my book, they’re not blacklisted by any means.