Linus Pauling
Two-time Nobel laureate. Coined "orthomolecular medicine" in 1968. Established vitamin C's role in collagen synthesis and disease.
— foundationsAsk any health question. Get answers grounded in the work of Pauling, Hoffer, Klenner, Cathcart, Pfeiffer, Walsh, and Saul — with citations to the actual sources. Track your supplements. Compare your values to orthomolecular optimal ranges. See trends in your data over weeks, not days.
It's built on a specific body of medical knowledge — orthomolecular medicine — that mainstream practice has largely overlooked for over half a century. Every answer is personalized to your stack, your history, and the data you share. The more you use it, the more it learns about you specifically.
Coined by Linus Pauling in 1968, orthomolecular medicine treats disease and preserves health by adjusting the concentrations of substances normally present in the human body — vitamins, minerals, amino acids, fatty acids — to their optimal levels for each individual.
Not a fringe idea. A different starting question. Where mainstream medicine asks what drug treats this symptom?, orthomolecular asks what is this person's biochemistry actually short of, and at what dose does it correct?
Optimum nutrition is the medicine of tomorrow.
Every answer olivetwell gives is grounded in primary sources from the field's foundational figures — not opinion, not vibes, not Reddit threads. When the app cites a megadose protocol or a deficiency pattern, you can trace it back to who said it, where, and when.
Two-time Nobel laureate. Coined "orthomolecular medicine" in 1968. Established vitamin C's role in collagen synthesis and disease.
— foundationsPioneer of niacin therapy for schizophrenia. First double-blind trials in psychiatry. Founder of orthomolecular psychiatry.
— mental healthTreated polio, viral hepatitis, and tetanus with intravenous vitamin C in 1940s–50s North Carolina. Pioneer of high-dose ascorbate.
— ascorbateDefined "bowel tolerance" titration of vitamin C. Established that demand rises in proportion to disease severity.
— titrationIdentified pyroluria, copper-zinc imbalance, and methylation patterns in mental illness. Founder of the Princeton Brain Bio Center.
— biochemistryMapped nutrient imbalances in mental illness across thousands of patients. Founder of the Walsh Research Institute and the modern biotype framework.
— biotypesEditor of the Orthomolecular Medicine News Service for nearly 20 years. Documented the safety record of vitamin therapy and made the field's literature accessible to a public audience.
— public canonSix capabilities in one app. Not a chatbot bolted onto a tracker. A coherent system for someone serious about understanding their own health.
Personalized to your stack, your history, and the data you share. Citations to primary sources, every time. The more you use it, the more it learns about you specifically.
Doses, timing, brands, costs. Watch what your stack actually does over weeks and months — not just the day you took it.
Upload bloodwork. See how your individual values compare to orthomolecular optimal ranges discussed in the literature — not just the standard "in normal range" framing.
Structured n=1 protocols. Define hypothesis, dose, duration, endpoints. Track outcomes against a real baseline instead of guessing.
Track symptoms, sleep, stack changes, and lab markers in one place. Catch a trend over weeks before you would notice it on your own.
A structured curriculum on orthomolecular medicine — vitamins, minerals, megadose protocols, the biochemistry behind it. Not blog posts. A real syllabus.
The American Association of Poison Control Centers tracks every reported toxicity event in the United States. Their annual reports — published in Clinical Toxicology and going back nearly four decades — show zero deaths from vitamins. Not in 2021. Not in any single year that data has been collected. None from B-vitamins, none from C, none from D or E, none from multivitamins. No deaths from minerals, amino acids, or herbal supplements either. Compare that with the leading classes of pharmaceuticals, where annual fatalities run in the tens of thousands.
That's the foundational argument of orthomolecular medicine, and it's the reason the field exists. olivetwell will recommend protocols, let you build a stack, and review what you're taking — because that's what the literature does. What it won't do is pretend supplementation is dangerous when six decades of clinical data say otherwise. If you're on prescription medication, talk to your doctor about interactions. Otherwise, this is one of the safest categories of intervention in the literature.
ChatGPT is trained on the public internet. It will tell you what's popular, not what's true — and on orthomolecular topics, what's popular is usually conventional medical orthodoxy that dismisses the field entirely. olivetwell is grounded in a curated library of primary sources from Linus Pauling, Abram Hoffer, Frederick Klenner, Robert Cathcart, Carl Pfeiffer, William Walsh, Andrew Saul, and Helen Saul Case. Every answer cites where it comes from. You can read the source. That's the whole point.
Yes — that's actually one of the reasons olivetwell cites primary sources. A claim with a citation to a 1971 Hoffer paper is something a thoughtful physician can engage with. A claim from "an AI app" is something they'll dismiss. We built the citation behavior specifically so you can take the literature into your appointment, not as a replacement for it.
olivetwell was built local-first. Your supplement stack, your symptom logs, your lab values, your notes — that information lives on your device, not on a server somewhere. It doesn't get warehoused, profiled, or aggregated for analytics. The only things that touch our backend are the bare minimum needed to make the app work: your account login, and a synced copy of what you save so you don't lose it if you change phones.
We don't sell data. We don't share with advertisers. We don't run ads. We don't use your conversations to train AI models — not ours, not anyone's. The full list of subprocessors we use, and exactly what each one does, is in our Privacy Policy. We're not a HIPAA-covered entity, but we're built to operate as if we were. If you want stricter privacy than your medical chart at any practice that takes insurance, you have it here.
No. The orthomolecular tradition does not work that way. The premise is that good nutrition, supported by appropriate supplementation, runs alongside conventional medical care — not against it. Over time, lab values may improve to the point where a prescribing physician chooses to taper or discontinue a medication; that decision belongs to your doctor, not to an app. olivetwell will never instruct you to stop a prescribed medication. Always consult your prescribing physician before any change to a medication regimen.
"In normal range" was
never really an answer.
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