Simply Wellness takes the claims everyone already knows β detox, superfoods, eight glasses, breakfast β and asks a plain question about each one: where did this come from, and what does the evidence actually support? No verdicts we can't back, no products, no scolding.
Each piece follows the same shape: the belief as it is usually stated, the paper trail behind it, and the part the evidence is genuinely settled on β plus the part it isn't.

The word has two lives β one in a hospital, one in a wellness catalog. Only one of them is measurable, and the gap explains most of the confusion.

No textbook defines it, no committee maintains a list. Tracing where the word came from explains why the food on the throne keeps changing.

A slogan that arrived long before the research did. What the studies since have found is far more equivocal than the phrase suggests.

The number has a documented origin, and it is stranger than the rule. A 1945 note, a missing final sentence, and eighty years of repetition.

Origin is not a safety property, and it never has been. Why the appeal to nature feels earned, what the label is regulated to mean, and a better question.

The front of the package is advertising; the back is a disclosure document. Four small conventions explain nearly all of the anxiety it causes.

A format so familiar most readers stopped seeing it as one. Why testimonial pairs persuade more than charts, and what they can and cannot show.

A bottle on a shelf carries a quiet implication: that somebody checked. The truth sits between βunregulatedβ and βtested like medicine.β

A study is a narrow question asked once. A headline is a verdict. Almost nothing survives that translation, and the fault starts before the reporter.
Health claims rarely arrive at a convenient moment. They turn up mid-scroll, in a group chat, on the back of a box. Simply Notes is a plain notebook for writing one down and coming back to it later, with the questions this blog keeps asking already on the page.
Simply Wellness is an independent publication about how wellness claims get made and how they travel. Much of what circulates as common knowledge began as an advertisement, a rounded-off recommendation, or a small study that nobody revisited. Tracing that history is usually more useful than arguing about the conclusion β and it tends to leave a reader better equipped for the next claim, not just this one.
Nothing here is for sale, and no article ends in a purchase. Where a topic is genuinely unresolved, the article says so instead of picking a side for the sake of a tidy ending. More on the approach in our editorial notes, the vocabulary in our glossary, and the common questions in our FAQ.