Are peptides right for you? Questions to ask before any program
Suitability is individual and context-dependent. The questions worth asking before any clinically supervised peptide program.
Heredity Editorial · May 28, 2026 · 7 min
Safety is not a yes or no; it is a set of conditions. The most useful thing a prospective member can do is arrive with the right questions, because good answers are a sign of a serious program.
Questions worth asking
Who is the licensed clinician overseeing this, and how do they assess suitability? Where is anything dispensed compounded, and by whom? What is monitored over time, and how do I reach someone if something changes? Vague answers are themselves an answer.
What a careful program looks like
A careful program is willing to say no. It declines when fit is not there, documents responsibility at each step, and treats ongoing oversight as the default rather than an upsell.
How Heredity approaches this
Heredity is application-only and clinically supervised. Membership is reviewed, not sold, and any protocol is designed and overseen by a licensed clinician, then compounded by a licensed U.S. pharmacy partner.
Nothing in this article is medical advice, nor a claim that any peptide diagnoses, treats, cures, or prevents any condition. Suitability is assessed individually. If a topic here is relevant to you, the right next step is a conversation, not a purchase.
Educational information only — not medical advice. Nothing here is intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. Membership is reviewed individually; any protocol is overseen by a licensed clinician and dispensed by a licensed U.S. pharmacy partner. See our medical disclaimer.
