NAD+ And Cellular Health: 7 Questions Before You Buy
The 7-question review desk checklist for evaluating NAD+, wellness, longevity, peptide, lab, supplement, and at-home health programs.
There is a specific kind of sales page that works almost too well.
It has calm colors. A doctor quote. A few science words. Maybe a lab graphic. Maybe someone who looks relieved in soft lighting. It says the program is personalized, clinically backed, root-cause focused, and designed for people who are tired of not feeling like themselves.
If you are looking at NAD+, peptide, or longevity programs, it can feel like the page is reading your mind.
Low energy. Slower recovery. Brain fog. Body-composition changes. That feeling that your body has new rules and nobody handed you the manual.
So when a program promises clarity, it is easy to lean in.
The problem is not that every wellness program is bad. Some are thoughtful. Some are useful. Some are built by serious people trying to solve real problems.
The problem is that the sales page is not the same thing as the program.
Before you pay, book the consult, upload your labs, or start the subscription, ask these seven questions.
1. What exactly is included?
Start here because vague programs can sound more complete than they are.
Look for specifics:
number of consults or coaching calls
who reviews your intake
whether labs are included or separate
whether supplements, prescriptions, devices, or refills are included
what happens after the first month
how support works between visits
If the page says "complete protocol" but never explains what you actually receive, slow down.
A program does not need to reveal private medical details on a public page. But it should be clear about the container you are buying.
Question to ask:
What do I get in month one, and what changes in month two?
2. What claims are they making?
Wellness copy often sounds scientific without being specific.
Watch for phrases like:
cellular energy
metabolic reset
hormone balance
clinically backed
doctor-formulated
personalized protocol
inflammation support
These phrases are not automatically wrong. But they are not proof by themselves.
The useful move is to translate the claim into a testable question.
If they say "cellular energy," ask: what marker are they improving, how is it measured, and what does that mean for a real person?
If they say "personalized," ask: personalized by labs, symptoms, medication history, age, goals, wearable data, or just a quiz?
Question to ask:
What does this claim mean in plain English?
3. What evidence do they cite?
There are levels of evidence.
A testimonial is not the same as a clinical study. A study on one ingredient is not the same as a study on the full program. "Doctor-formulated" is not the same as independently tested. A mechanism that sounds plausible is not the same as a proven outcome for you.
For NAD+, peptide, and longevity offers, this matters because many programs borrow real pain points and attach them to broad promises.
The better programs usually do not overstate. They explain what is known, what is still being studied, and where clinician judgment matters.
Question to ask:
Are they showing evidence for the program, the ingredient, the category, or just the vibe?
4. What does it cost after add-ons?
The first price is rarely the full price.
Check for:
labs
shipping
supplements
prescription or pharmacy costs
follow-up consults
refill fees
device or wearable costs
minimum commitments
cancellation terms
If a program costs more than your car payment, it should explain the real monthly cost without making you hunt.
Price transparency is not just a financial issue. It is a trust signal.
Question to ask:
What is the total cost if I stay for 90 days?
5. Who supports you if something feels off?
This is the question many sales pages skip.
Support is not the same as a checkout page. It is not the same as a Facebook group. It is not the same as a "care team" label with no details.
Depending on the program, support might mean customer service, a coach, a licensed clinician, lab review, follow-up messaging, or clear referral instructions.
For medical or prescription-adjacent programs, appropriate licensed clinician involvement matters. For non-medical wellness programs, support still matters because people need to know who answers questions, handles changes, and explains next steps.
Question to ask:
Who do I contact if I have a concern, and what are they qualified to help with?
6. Does it fit the buyer it claims to serve?
Putting "personalized," "cellular," or "longevity" on a page does not make the program built for your actual situation.
Look for whether the program acknowledges the buyer context in a useful way:
goals and starting point
age, health history, and medications
sleep changes
strength and muscle preservation
protein and nutrition practicality
perimenopause or menopause context
medication and medical-history questions
recovery and stress load
lab interpretation
realistic adherence
Be careful with programs that use frustration, aging anxiety, or low-energy claims as pressure tactics.
Good programs do not shame you for wanting more energy, recovery, or clarity. They explain what they do, what they do not do, and where professional care belongs.
Question to ask:
What about this program is actually specific to the person it claims to help?
7. How easy is it to cancel, pause, or leave?
The exit path tells you a lot.
Before you join, find:
cancellation steps
renewal timing
refund policy
minimum commitment
what happens to labs or records
whether unused products are refundable
how to pause
If the program makes joining easy and leaving confusing, that is part of the review.
Question to ask:
If this is not a fit, how do I stop paying?
The Review Desk Rule
Here is the simple version:
If the program cannot clearly explain what is included, what it costs, what claims it is making, what evidence supports those claims, and who helps you if something feels off, slow down.
That does not mean the program is bad.
It means the sales page has not earned your trust yet.
At Cellular Program Reviews, we are going to use this lens every week.
We will review programs. Translate claims. Read fine print. Ask whether the offer makes sense for the audience it claims to serve. Cover NAD+, peptides, and wellness claims carefully and plainly. Separate useful wellness from inflated wellness copy.
We are not here to give medical advice, diagnose, prescribe, or tell you what treatment to pursue.
We are here to make you harder to confuse before you spend the money.
Send Us The Program
Reply with one wellness program you want reviewed.
It can be:
an NAD+ or cellular-health program
a peptide or GLP-1-adjacent program
a lab-based wellness plan
a menopause or hormone support offer
a supplement subscription
a longevity membership
a wearable or recovery program
a telehealth coaching program
Send the name, link, screenshot, or the claim that made you pause.
We will start with the programs readers are actually seeing.
Reply with a program to review.
Learn About NAD+
Educational content only. Not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment guidance.
