About Legit Semaglutide: An Independent Research Digest

What this is

Legit Semaglutide is an independent editorial project that publishes plain-English summaries of the peer-reviewed research literature on semaglutide. We are not a clinic. We do not employ clinicians and we do not provide medical advice. We do not manufacture, sell, or distribute any product. Our work is editorial commentary on publicly available science.

The name is the whole thesis. "Legit" is not a sales pitch — it is the editorial stance: the internet is awash in unsourced semaglutide content, and this site exists to do the opposite, reading the actual trial record straight and citing every number to the study that produced it. The lens we lead with is cardiovascular outcomes, because that is where the evidence is strongest and least hyped.

How we read the evidence

The rule here is simple: if a study did not measure it, we do not claim it. The strongest evidence runs first — the cardiovascular outcome trials before the weight-loss numbers — and the open questions are marked as open rather than rounded up to certainty. Community reports of real-world effects are included for context, but they are quarantined under an explicit anecdotal label and never presented as findings. The boxed warnings and contraindications are surfaced plainly, not buried.

What "legit" does not mean: it is not a claim about the site offering any service. We do not diagnose, treat, consult, or prescribe. The modifier is a position we occupy relative to the literature — an editor reading the record — not a description of a healthcare practice.

What we don't do

We do not recommend doses for any individual. We do not name commercial brands of semaglutide. We do not link to vendors or sell anything. Dosing information on this site describes what was administered in trials and what the approved label documents, in the third person — it is never instruction. For decisions about whether semaglutide is appropriate for you, the right source is a licensed prescriber who knows your history, not a website. Semaglutide is an approved prescription medicine, and this site is a reading of its published research — nothing more, and nothing less.