New database reviews 500 longevity interventions
Anyone trying to figure out whether a supplement or lifestyle protocol actually works drowns in studies, blogs, and marketing. A new platform aims to change that with structured, independent evidence reviews.
The Forever Healthy Foundation has publicly launched evipedia.ai, an encyclopedia that examines more than 500 health and longevity interventions. These range from supplements and botanicals to lifestyle protocols and early-stage rejuvenation therapies. The emphasis is on distinguishing what is well-supported, what has limited evidence, and what barely goes beyond marketing claims.
Built for the credibility problem
The problem the platform addresses is familiar to anyone who seriously engages with longevity research. The scientific literature is vast, fragmented, and fast-moving. At the same time, commercial communication about supplements and therapies is rarely transparent about the limitations of the evidence. The researchers behind the platform state that Evipedia was built to bridge that gap by systematically summarizing all available studies for each intervention.
The platform distinguishes itself from existing tools through the depth of its assessments. Rather than a simple score, each intervention receives a full description of the evidence landscape: what types of studies exist, how strong they are, and what their limitations are. This mirrors how scientists themselves evaluate research, through an approach known as evidence-based medicine.
Free and publicly accessible
Evipedia is freely available to everyone. That matters: many comparable tools are behind paywalls or require subscriptions. The Forever Healthy Foundation funds the platform as part of its mission to make healthy aging more accessible through reliable information. The platform will expand as more interventions are reviewed.
The launch responds to a broader need in the field. As longevity medicine grows, so does the volume of unvalidated claims. A publicly available evidence base can help inform consumers, clinicians, and researchers more effectively.