About Pepti
We built Pepti because we take GLP-1 medication ourselves and wanted a private place to keep doses, weight, symptoms, photos, and appointment notes — without handing our health records to a cloud account. This page explains who makes Pepti, how we write the health content on this site, and where our role ends and your clinician's begins.
Who makes Pepti
Pepti is built and operated by andremilk solutions, a small independent software team in Brazil. We are the same people behind the privacy policy and the app you download on Google Play. We are software builders and people who use these medications — we are not a clinic, a pharmacy, or a medical organization, and we say so plainly because it matters for how you should read everything here.
What Pepti is — and what it is not
Pepti is a personal tracker. It helps you record and review your own routine: dose dates, weight, side effects, measurements, progress photos, reminders, and notes you can export for an appointment.
- It is not a medical device. It does not diagnose, treat, or monitor any condition.
- It does not recommend doses or tell you when to change a medication.
- The estimated active-level curve is theoretical. It is a model based on what you log and on published medication parameters — not a measurement of drug concentration in your blood.
Editorial policy
Some pages on this site explain how GLP-1 medications work, common side effects, and how people organize their routines. Here is how we handle that content.
Purpose
Our articles are for general education and product context. They are not a substitute for a diagnosis, a prescription, or advice from a qualified professional who knows your history.
How we source
When an article states a fact about a medication, we work from primary sources and link them where possible:
- manufacturer prescribing information and patient leaflets (for example, the FDA-approved label or the Anvisa bula);
- peer-reviewed studies and reviews indexed on PubMed / PMC;
- regulators and official bodies (FDA, Anvisa, CMED) for approvals, pricing, and safety notices.
Each article shows its publication date and a "last updated" date so you can judge how current it is. We list the main sources at the bottom of articles that make clinical claims.
How we review — and our honest limit
Articles are written and fact-checked against those sources by the Pepti team. We do not claim that a physician has reviewed each article, because that would not be true today. Instead we keep two rules: we stick close to what the primary sources actually say, and wherever content touches a decision about your treatment — dose, titration, whether a symptom is serious — we point you back to your own clinician rather than answer it ourselves. If we are ever able to add qualified professional review, we will name the reviewer and their credentials here.
Corrections
If you find something inaccurate or out of date, email [email protected] and we will check it against the sources and fix it. We re-date an article when we change anything that affects its meaning.
Medical disclaimer. Nothing on this site or in the app is medical advice. Pepti organizes the information you choose to record. Diagnosis, dosing, and treatment decisions belong with a qualified health professional. If a symptom is severe, persistent, or worrying, seek medical care.
Contact
General and editorial: [email protected]
Privacy and data rights: [email protected]