How we research, write, fact-check, review, and update content on this site.
Metabo Drops Reviews provides independent, evidence-grounded evaluations of dietary supplements in the metabolism and weight-management category. We earn affiliate commission on purchases referred through our links, but editorial decisions sit entirely with the editorial team. The manufacturer of Metabo Drops has no review, editing, approval, or veto authority over our content.
This independence is the foundation of our usefulness to readers. We have published reviews critical of products in our affiliate network, identified marketing overreach, and recommended against purchase in cases where the evidence didn't support it.
Every health and nutrition claim on this site must be supported by published, peer-reviewed research indexed on PubMed (the U.S. National Library of Medicine database). Where we cite specific findings, we link directly to the PubMed entry by its PMID (PubMed Identifier).
Hierarchy of sources we use, in descending order of weight:
Sources we do not rely on as primary citations:
All ingredient evaluations, health claims, mechanism explanations, and contraindication notes on this site are reviewed by Dr. Rachel Foster, MD, our medical reviewer. Dr. Foster is a board-certified Internal Medicine Physician & Metabolic Health Specialist with clinical experience in metabolic health.
Her role is technical accuracy review, not endorsement. Specifically, she verifies that:
Where Dr. Foster identifies a claim as overreaching the evidence, we revise the claim before publication. Where she has concerns about safety information being incomplete, we add the missing context.
Every health claim that can be substantiated by a specific study links directly to that study's PubMed entry. We use the PMID (PubMed Identifier) format in our citations rather than full journal references, because PMIDs are stable, machine-readable, and lead readers directly to the abstract.
Where we summarize a body of research without citing a specific study (e.g., "the strongest evidence supports…"), the summary is reviewed by our medical reviewer for accuracy.
We do not use citation laundering — the practice of citing a secondary source that summarizes a primary source, when the secondary source has misrepresented or oversimplified the primary. If we cite a meta-analysis, we've read the meta-analysis.
This site participates in the ClickBank affiliate marketplace. When a reader clicks through to the official Metabo Drops sales page and makes a purchase, we receive an affiliate commission from ClickBank's payout system at no additional cost to the reader.
Affiliate relationships are disclosed:
rel="sponsored" attribute)FTC guidance on affiliate disclosure requires the disclosure to be clear, conspicuous, and made before or close to the link. Our implementation follows FTC guidelines.
Editorial staff and our medical reviewer do not receive direct compensation from the manufacturer of Metabo Drops. Our only financial relationship with the product is through the standard ClickBank affiliate commission structure, which is identical to that of any other ClickBank affiliate.
Specifically:
Different content types are reviewed and updated on different schedules:
The site was last comprehensively audited on May 18, 2026. Individual page modification dates are reflected in the structured data on each page.
If we publish an error, we correct it. Promptly and publicly.
To request a correction:
We'd rather correct ten errors than ignore one.
Beyond the formal policies above, we hold ourselves to a simple test: would we send this page to a family member trying to make this decision? If the answer is "yes, with confidence," we publish. If the answer is "not quite," we revise. If the answer is "no," we don't publish at all.
Editorial Policy v2.0, last updated May 18, 2026.