PaperAtlas

PaperAtlas

Research-backed ratings to make informed health decisions

12 followers

Easily find research-backed ratings to make informed health decisions. Compare effectiveness and side effects of supplements, treatments, and interventions.
PaperAtlas gallery image
PaperAtlas gallery image
PaperAtlas gallery image
PaperAtlas gallery image
PaperAtlas gallery image
PaperAtlas gallery image
PaperAtlas gallery image
Free
Launch Team / Built With
Anima Playground
AI with an Eye for Design
Promoted

What do you think? …

Kasper Unn Weihe
Hey Product Hunt Community! 👋 I’m Kasper, founder of PaperAtlas, and I’m pumped to launch our game-changing platform with you today. We’re on a mission to make science your superpower for smarter health decisions—think of us as your personal research sidekick! 🚀 What’s PaperAtlas? It’s a science-first hub that takes the guesswork out of supplements, treatments, and wellness hacks. Whether you’re chasing better sleep, muscle gains, longevity, or just feeling your best, we’ve got you covered. 🌿💪 Our secret sauce? We dig through top-tier scientific databases and peer-reviewed journals, vet every study, and serve up clear, comparable ratings—no fluff, just facts. Here’s what makes us stand out: ✅ Effectiveness Score – How well does it actually work? ✅ Side Effects Score – What’s the downside to watch for? ✅ Evidence Level Score – How solid is the science backing it? Imagine browsing bite-sized summaries that let you compare options in minutes, not hours. Curious if that trending supplement is worth the hype? Want to optimize your routine with evidence, not rumors? PaperAtlas makes it *easy* to find out. 🔬✨ Swing by our site and explore—your next health upgrade is waiting! I’d love to hear your thoughts, so drop a comment with your feedback or fave wellness topic. Thanks for the support! 🙌 https://paperatlas.com/
Kasper Unn Weihe

@masump The effectiveness scores are largely based on meta-analysis papers such as this one:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10365865/

The effectiveness scores are directly derived from that. However, I think this has to be more clear on the website. The evidence levels is largely based on how many papers and clinical trials that have been conducted on the treatment.