I'm a Pharmacist. I Sell Supplements I Know Don't Work. Here's the One I Gave My Mother — and Why.
Dr. Rami Nassar has worked behind a pharmacy counter for 22 years. He fills prescriptions next to shelves of supplements he knows can't absorb. He's never recommended one — until he watched his own mother spend $1,977 on biotin that was passing through her body unused, and found the one cofactor that changes the chemistry.
I Sell Supplements I Know Don't Work
I need to say something I've never said publicly.
I'm a pharmacist. I've worked behind the same counter for 22 years. I fill prescriptions all day — medications that are tested, regulated, dosed to the microgram, and formulated so the body can actually use them. That's what pharmaceutical science does. It ensures that the molecule reaches the tissue it's supposed to reach at the concentration it's supposed to reach it.
The supplements on the shelf six feet from my counter meet almost none of those standards.
I sell them anyway.
A woman comes in. She asks for biotin. I point to the shelf. She picks a bottle. She pays. I bag it. She leaves.
I don't say "that won't absorb without B6." I don't say "the dose in that bottle won't survive your body's priority system." I don't say "you're about to spend $18 a month on an ingredient your intestines are going to flush unused."
I don't say any of those things because pharmacists aren't trained to talk people out of supplements. The supplements are retail. People buy them. I make margin.
In 22 years, I have never once recommended a supplement to a customer.
Not once.
Until my mother.
Why Most Supplements Can't Work
If you've tried biotin and it didn't work, you're right. It couldn't have.
Not "probably didn't." Not "might not have worked for your body." Couldn't. The biochemistry is clear. I learned it in pharmacy school. First year. Semester one.
Biotin requires vitamin B6 as a cofactor to absorb through the intestinal lining. B6 is the enzyme activator that opens the absorption pathway. Without B6 present in the same formula, biotin enters the stomach, moves through the intestines, and exits the body without entering the bloodstream. Without reaching a single follicle. Without doing anything.
This is in the textbook on my shelf. Third edition, chapter 14. Cofactors and bioavailability. Every pharmacy student in every program in the country learns this.
Now let me walk you through my own shelf.
I stock all of them. I sell all of them. I make margin on all of them. And the biotin in every single one passes through the buyer's intestines unused because the $3 vitamin that makes it absorbable is not in any of the formulas.
You're right not to trust supplements. You're right to be skeptical. You're right that most of them don't work.
What you might not know is WHY they don't work. And the "why" is simple enough that a pharmacist can explain it in one sentence and you can verify it on the back of your own bottle in three seconds.
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Check Your Label — Here's What to Look For →What My Mother's Drawer Taught Me
My mother started thinning at 52. She bought biotin from my pharmacy. She bought Nutrafol. Viviscal. Rosemary oil. Collagen powder. Hers minoxidil. Vegamour.
Seven products. Three years. $1,977.
She bought most of them from me. From my counter. My shelf. My store.
I rang them up. I put them in the bag. I said "love you, mom." She walked out with bottles of biotin that I — a pharmacist trained in the biochemistry of why biotin can't absorb alone — watched her purchase without speaking up.
Thanksgiving 2023. Her bathroom. The drawer.
I stood in my mother's bathroom looking at seven bottles from my own store and I experienced a guilt that has no pharmacological intervention.
I went home. I couldn't sleep. At midnight I pulled out my old pharmacy textbook. Chapter 14. Cofactors and bioavailability. The page I'd highlighted in yellow eighteen years ago as a student.
I'd HIGHLIGHTED it. Eighteen years ago. Yellow highlighter. The science I'd known since before I had a pharmacy license. And I'd never connected it to the $18 bottle of biotin on my own shelf that my own mother was buying every month.
I went to the pharmacy the next morning. I pulled every biotin product off the shelf. I flipped them over. I read every label with the attention I normally reserve for prescription drug interaction checks.
Biotin: present. B6 at cofactor ratio: absent.
Every. Single. One.
I stood behind my counter looking at a shelf of supplements I'd sold for two decades and for the first time I understood what I'd been selling. Not because the information was hidden. Because I'd separated "pharmacist knowledge" from "supplement shelf" the way you separate your work brain from your home brain. And my mother paid $1,977 for that separation.
"The guilt of a pharmacist who watched his own mother buy supplements he knew couldn't absorb has no pharmacological intervention. There is no pill for this. Only a public correction."
The One Reason This One Is Different
I'm not going to tell you this is the best supplement on the market. I'm not going to tell you thousands of women love it. I'm not going to tell you about a clinical trial or show you a celebrity.
I'm going to tell you one thing.
B6 is present. At the cofactor ratio. Beside the biotin. In the same formula.
That's the difference. The biotin in this formula can absorb because the cofactor that opens the absorption pathway is there. The biotin in every other bottle on my shelf — and in your cabinet — can't absorb because the cofactor is absent.
"Can work" and "will work" are different claims. I'm making the first one. This product CAN work because the absorption chemistry is intact. Every other biotin product I sell CANNOT work because the absorption chemistry is broken.
"Can" is a better starting point than "can't." And "can't" is where every bottle in your cabinet currently sits.
I don't recommend supplements. I've never recommended a supplement in 22 years behind the counter. This is the first time. And the reason is not that the marketing impressed me. The reason is that the biochemistry is correct. The cofactor is there. The pathway is open. And my mother spent $1,977 on my own shelf buying products where it wasn't.
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See the One Formula with the Cofactor →What Happened When I Gave It to My Mother
I gave it to her without telling her what it was for. "Try this for your nails." After $1,977 of promises attached to the word "hair," I went in through the nails.
She didn't mention it. I didn't mention it. She bought toothpaste and left.
I stood behind my counter looking at the shelf of biotin bottles I sell every day. Thirty bottles a month. $18 each. No B6 in any of them. My mother had just walked out wearing a clip she hadn't used in two years and I was standing next to a shelf of products that couldn't have put it there.
I wrote something on a piece of paper and taped it to the shelf next to the biotin.
The pharmacist explained B6. I checked my bottle. It wasn't there. The new one has it. Week 2 my nails changed. I hadn't felt anything from a supplement in four years.
Nobody has ever explained supplement science to me at a pharmacy counter before. He treated it like a prescription counseling session. The gummy costs less than the biotin I was already buying and it actually absorbs.
I've been buying the engine with no ignition for three years. That sentence from the pharmacist is the one I can't stop thinking about. The engine was real. The ignition was missing. For three years.
90-day satisfaction guarantee · Free shipping
Start the 90-Day Protocol →Check Your Own Label
I'm not asking you to trust me. I'm a pharmacist who sells supplements he knows don't work. My credibility on the supplement shelf is exactly zero and I've earned that.
I'm asking you to trust the back of your own bottle.
Go to your cabinet. Find your biotin. Whatever brand. Whatever price. Whatever friend or doctor or TikTok recommended it.
Flip it over.
Find "biotin" on the ingredient panel.
Look for "B6" next to it.
If it's there at the cofactor ratio — keep taking it. The absorption pathway is open. Give it time.
If it's not there — and it won't be, because almost nobody includes it — then the biotin in that bottle has been passing through your body unused for however many months you've been swallowing it. That is not my opinion. That is chapter 14 of the pharmacy textbook on my shelf. The chapter I highlighted in yellow eighteen years ago and didn't apply to my own mother's supplements until she'd spent $1,977.
I don't expect you to believe me. I expect you to check.
Three seconds. One word. The back of the bottle.
The Only Hair Gummy With B6 at the Cofactor Ratio
- Full 90-Day Supply (3 Bottles)
- 90-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
- Free Shipping
- Covers the complete growth cycle
- 60-Day Supply (2 Bottles)
- 90-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
- Free Shipping
- Cancel Or Pause At Anytime
- 30-Day Supply (1 Bottle)
- 90-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
- Free Shipping
Dr. Nassar's 90-Day Guarantee
Frequently Asked Questions
I should have taped that sign to the shelf twenty years ago. I should have told my mother at the first bottle. I should have connected the textbook to the shelf the day I got my license.
I didn't. The sign is up now. The article is written. The cofactor is in the formula.
That's all I can do.
P.S. — The sign on my pharmacy shelf has been there for four months. In that time, standalone biotin sales at my counter have dropped 60%. Three of my regular biotin customers switched to the six-nutrient formula and reported nail changes by week two. One of them — a woman who'd been buying biotin from me for two years — said "why didn't you tell me sooner?" I didn't have a good answer. I still don't.
I'm a Pharmacist. I Sell Supplements I Know Don't Work. Here's the One I Gave My Mother — and Why.
Dr. Rami Nassar has worked behind a pharmacy counter for 22 years. He fills prescriptions next to shelves of supplements he knows can't absorb. He's never recommended one — until he watched his own mother spend $1,977 on biotin that was passing through her body unused, and found the one cofactor that changes the chemistry.
I Sell Supplements I Know Don't Work
I need to say something I've never said publicly.
I'm a pharmacist. I've worked behind the same counter for 22 years. I fill prescriptions all day — medications that are tested, regulated, dosed to the microgram, and formulated so the body can actually use them. That's what pharmaceutical science does. It ensures that the molecule reaches the tissue it's supposed to reach at the concentration it's supposed to reach it.
The supplements on the shelf six feet from my counter meet almost none of those standards.
I sell them anyway.
A woman comes in. She asks for biotin. I point to the shelf. She picks a bottle. She pays. I bag it. She leaves.
I don't say "that won't absorb without B6." I don't say "the dose in that bottle won't survive your body's priority system." I don't say "you're about to spend $18 a month on an ingredient your intestines are going to flush unused."
I don't say any of those things because pharmacists aren't trained to talk people out of supplements. The supplements are retail. People buy them. I make margin.
In 22 years, I have never once recommended a supplement to a customer.
Not once.
Until my mother.
Why Most Supplements Can't Work
If you've tried biotin and it didn't work, you're right. It couldn't have.
Not "probably didn't." Not "might not have worked for your body." Couldn't. The biochemistry is clear. I learned it in pharmacy school. First year. Semester one.
Biotin requires vitamin B6 as a cofactor to absorb through the intestinal lining. B6 is the enzyme activator that opens the absorption pathway. Without B6 present in the same formula, biotin enters the stomach, moves through the intestines, and exits the body without entering the bloodstream. Without reaching a single follicle. Without doing anything.
This is in the textbook on my shelf. Third edition, chapter 14. Cofactors and bioavailability. Every pharmacy student in every program in the country learns this.
Now let me walk you through my own shelf.
I stock all of them. I sell all of them. I make margin on all of them. And the biotin in every single one passes through the buyer's intestines unused because the $3 vitamin that makes it absorbable is not in any of the formulas.
You're right not to trust supplements. You're right to be skeptical. You're right that most of them don't work.
What you might not know is WHY they don't work. And the "why" is simple enough that a pharmacist can explain it in one sentence and you can verify it on the back of your own bottle in three seconds.
90-day satisfaction guarantee · Free shipping
Check Your Label — Here's What to Look For →What My Mother's Drawer Taught Me
My mother started thinning at 52. She bought biotin from my pharmacy. She bought Nutrafol. Viviscal. Rosemary oil. Collagen powder. Hers minoxidil. Vegamour.
Seven products. Three years. $1,977.
She bought most of them from me. From my counter. My shelf. My store.
I rang them up. I put them in the bag. I said "love you, mom." She walked out with bottles of biotin that I — a pharmacist trained in the biochemistry of why biotin can't absorb alone — watched her purchase without speaking up.
Thanksgiving 2023. Her bathroom. The drawer.
I stood in my mother's bathroom looking at seven bottles from my own store and I experienced a guilt that has no pharmacological intervention.
I went home. I couldn't sleep. At midnight I pulled out my old pharmacy textbook. Chapter 14. Cofactors and bioavailability. The page I'd highlighted in yellow eighteen years ago as a student.
I'd HIGHLIGHTED it. Eighteen years ago. Yellow highlighter. The science I'd known since before I had a pharmacy license. And I'd never connected it to the $18 bottle of biotin on my own shelf that my own mother was buying every month.
I went to the pharmacy the next morning. I pulled every biotin product off the shelf. I flipped them over. I read every label with the attention I normally reserve for prescription drug interaction checks.
Biotin: present. B6 at cofactor ratio: absent.
Every. Single. One.
I stood behind my counter looking at a shelf of supplements I'd sold for two decades and for the first time I understood what I'd been selling. Not because the information was hidden. Because I'd separated "pharmacist knowledge" from "supplement shelf" the way you separate your work brain from your home brain. And my mother paid $1,977 for that separation.
"The guilt of a pharmacist who watched his own mother buy supplements he knew couldn't absorb has no pharmacological intervention. There is no pill for this. Only a public correction."
The One Reason This One Is Different
I'm not going to tell you this is the best supplement on the market. I'm not going to tell you thousands of women love it. I'm not going to tell you about a clinical trial or show you a celebrity.
I'm going to tell you one thing.
B6 is present. At the cofactor ratio. Beside the biotin. In the same formula.
That's the difference. The biotin in this formula can absorb because the cofactor that opens the absorption pathway is there. The biotin in every other bottle on my shelf — and in your cabinet — can't absorb because the cofactor is absent.
"Can work" and "will work" are different claims. I'm making the first one. This product CAN work because the absorption chemistry is intact. Every other biotin product I sell CANNOT work because the absorption chemistry is broken.
"Can" is a better starting point than "can't." And "can't" is where every bottle in your cabinet currently sits.
I don't recommend supplements. I've never recommended a supplement in 22 years behind the counter. This is the first time. And the reason is not that the marketing impressed me. The reason is that the biochemistry is correct. The cofactor is there. The pathway is open. And my mother spent $1,977 on my own shelf buying products where it wasn't.
90-day satisfaction guarantee · Free shipping
See the One Formula with the Cofactor →What Happened When I Gave It to My Mother
I gave it to her without telling her what it was for. "Try this for your nails." After $1,977 of promises attached to the word "hair," I went in through the nails.
She didn't mention it. I didn't mention it. She bought toothpaste and left.
I stood behind my counter looking at the shelf of biotin bottles I sell every day. Thirty bottles a month. $18 each. No B6 in any of them. My mother had just walked out wearing a clip she hadn't used in two years and I was standing next to a shelf of products that couldn't have put it there.
I wrote something on a piece of paper and taped it to the shelf next to the biotin.
The pharmacist explained B6. I checked my bottle. It wasn't there. The new one has it. Week 2 my nails changed. I hadn't felt anything from a supplement in four years.
Nobody has ever explained supplement science to me at a pharmacy counter before. He treated it like a prescription counseling session. The gummy costs less than the biotin I was already buying and it actually absorbs.
I've been buying the engine with no ignition for three years. That sentence from the pharmacist is the one I can't stop thinking about. The engine was real. The ignition was missing. For three years.
90-day satisfaction guarantee · Free shipping
Start the 90-Day Protocol →Check Your Own Label
I'm not asking you to trust me. I'm a pharmacist who sells supplements he knows don't work. My credibility on the supplement shelf is exactly zero and I've earned that.
I'm asking you to trust the back of your own bottle.
Go to your cabinet. Find your biotin. Whatever brand. Whatever price. Whatever friend or doctor or TikTok recommended it.
Flip it over.
Find "biotin" on the ingredient panel.
Look for "B6" next to it.
If it's there at the cofactor ratio — keep taking it. The absorption pathway is open. Give it time.
If it's not there — and it won't be, because almost nobody includes it — then the biotin in that bottle has been passing through your body unused for however many months you've been swallowing it. That is not my opinion. That is chapter 14 of the pharmacy textbook on my shelf. The chapter I highlighted in yellow eighteen years ago and didn't apply to my own mother's supplements until she'd spent $1,977.
I don't expect you to believe me. I expect you to check.
Three seconds. One word. The back of the bottle.
The Only Hair Gummy With B6 at the Cofactor Ratio
- Full 90-Day Supply (3 Bottles)
- 90-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
- Free Shipping
- Covers the complete growth cycle
- 60-Day Supply (2 Bottles)
- 90-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
- Free Shipping
- Cancel Or Pause At Anytime
- 30-Day Supply (1 Bottle)
- 90-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
- Free Shipping
Dr. Nassar's 90-Day Guarantee
Frequently Asked Questions
I should have taped that sign to the shelf twenty years ago. I should have told my mother at the first bottle. I should have connected the textbook to the shelf the day I got my license.
I didn't. The sign is up now. The article is written. The cofactor is in the formula.
That's all I can do.
P.S. — The sign on my pharmacy shelf has been there for four months. In that time, standalone biotin sales at my counter have dropped 60%. Three of my regular biotin customers switched to the six-nutrient formula and reported nail changes by week two. One of them — a woman who'd been buying biotin from me for two years — said "why didn't you tell me sooner?" I didn't have a good answer. I still don't.