Why I'm Rethinking the Way Supplements Are Delivered

July 13
7 mins

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Episode Description

  • Supplements were never meant to be miniature drugs. They exist to complement a nutrient-dense diet, not to override a poor one the way pharmaceuticals are used to suppress symptoms
  • Compliance is the supplement world's quietest failure. Good intentions are common; the willingness to swallow a fistful of capsules every day is not, and a supplement sitting in your cabinet does nothing for you
  • For certain ingredients, I'm moving toward clean, sprinkle-on-food powders in foil pouches and canisters instead of capsules in bottles. When the supplement becomes part of your meal, taking it stops being another chore to remember. This is not a blanket rejection of capsules. Some ingredients genuinely need a capsule, a softgel, enteric protection, or a shield from oxygen, light, and moisture, and those will stay exactly as they are
  • I'm also rethinking glass. It sounds like the obvious premium choice, but in the real world it's heavy, breakable, costly to ship, and — like any bottle or jar — it lets in a fresh charge of air every time you open it. For several items in our line the better answer is aluminum-foil packaging: pouches and foil-lined canisters flushed with nitrogen and packed with an oxygen absorber and desiccant, which protects fragile actives far better than any bottle. That said, glass still has a place for certain liquid products
  • The most overlooked part of any supplement package is the closure. It decides how much oxygen leaks in and, for a powder, whether the pack can reseal — a standard zipper clogs on fine powder — while its liners, gaskets, adhesives, and inks can carry hidden chemistry, which is why we scrutinize every layer that touches or seals the product
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