Pre-launchSupplement safety companion

Scan your supplements. Find hidden conflicts.

Nuri helps you scan supplement labels, spot duplicate ingredients, and review possible conflicts with your medicines and health conditions before a new pill joins your routine.

Label scanStack reviewDoctor summary
We are preparing launch. Waitlist members receive concise weekly launch notes.
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Morning review3 alerts today
Ask clinicianRed yeast rice may overlap with your statin.
Watch zinc totalDaily Multi and Immune Zinc C both contain zinc.
Looks OKOmega-3 has no demo conflict in this profile.
1Scan the supplement facts label
2Confirm ingredients and dose
3Review your stack for conflicts

The hidden problem

Supplement risk usually appears in the combination.

A multivitamin, magnesium, fish oil, zinc, and a cholesterol supplement can each look reasonable alone. Together, they can create dose overlap, timing issues, and questions worth bringing to a pharmacist.

Red yeast rice + statin

Ask clinician before combining.

Magnesium timing

Separate from thyroid medicine.

Duplicate zinc

Daily Multi and immune blend overlap.

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Nuri says

This is not an automatic no.It is a reason to ask a better question before this joins your routine.

A companion, not a tracker

Nuri explains the why, not just the warning.

The goal is not to scare people away from supplements. It is to make the stack understandable, show uncertainty clearly, and help users decide what needs professional review.

Supplement interaction checker

Review supplements against medicines, timing concerns, and common high-risk combinations.

Condition-aware cautions

Add diabetes, high cholesterol, thyroid disease, kidney concerns, pregnancy, or other context.

Doctor-ready summary

Turn a messy supplement stack into a short list of questions for your pharmacist or clinician.

Safety language users can understand

Four labels. Clear next step.

Looks OK

No obvious issue found in the current profile.

Watch

Dose, duplicate, timing, or duration deserves attention.

Ask clinician

Bring this to a pharmacist or doctor before using.

Avoid until reviewed

High uncertainty or high-risk context needs professional input.

Why Nuri exists

Most people do not take one supplement. They take a stack.

A single supplement may look harmless on its own. The risk often appears when it is combined with prescription medicines, chronic conditions, duplicate nutrients, or high-dose ingredients. Nuri is built for the real-life supplement stack.

Questions before adding a supplement

Can Nuri replace a doctor or pharmacist?

No. Nuri provides educational support and helps prepare better questions for licensed professionals.

What does Nuri check first?

Labels, duplicate ingredients, high-dose patterns, medicine timing, and condition-aware cautions.

Will Nuri sell supplements?

The first MVP focuses on safety and trust. Any future product recommendations should be transparent and never affect safety ratings.

Join the launch waitlist.

We will share weekly launch notes, safety updates, and early access timing before Nuri opens publicly.