Is This Supplement Legit

Stack analysis

Ginger + chamomile + slippery elm

Mild GI comfort / nausea-soothing herbal combinations (non-prescription self-care tier).

Mixed

Confidence

60/100

Registry ingredients

Structured entries from our supplement intelligence registry (not personalized recommendations).

  • Ginger (Zingiber officinale)herb

    Evidence tier: medium·Typical label range: Dried powder often grams/day in studies; extracts concentrated.

  • Chamomile (Matricaria recutita)herb

    Evidence tier: medium·Typical label range: Tea frequent; extracts for allergies caution (Asteraceae).

  • Slippery elm (Ulmus rubra)herb

    Evidence tier: low·Typical label range: Powders/teas ad hoc.

What this stack claims

Calm upset stomach, reduce nausea, coat esophagus - mostly mild symptomatic goals.

Biological logic

Ginger has modest evidence in some nausea contexts; chamomile is widely used as a mild relaxant/digestive tea; slippery elm mucilage can soothe mucosa mechanically.

Evidence level

Registry tier for this stack: LOW

This is not a treatment for ulcers, GERD complications, IBD flares, or bleeding - duration limits and red-flag symptoms matter more than herb choice.

Risks

Allergies (Asteraceae for chamomile), medication absorption timing with mucilage, bleeding caution with high-dose ginger + anticoagulants, pregnancy-specific ginger guidance varies - clinician for persistent symptoms.

Final verdict

**Acceptable low-risk self-care for minor complaints** with clear stop rules; **not a system for chronic undiagnosed GI disease**.

FAQ

When should I stop self-treating?
Vomiting blood, black stools, severe pain, weight loss, or persistent symptoms beyond a short window - seek urgent care.
Tea vs capsules?
Dose and concentration vary wildly; teas are milder; capsules need label discipline.
Does slippery elm block meds?
Take medications away from mucilage products when possible.

All stack analyses·Methodology