Skip to content

Evidence Library

Are you a healthcare professionalReview method
Evidence library

Evidence Library

Browse evidence entries by support type, formula boundary, testing need, use experience, and claim-risk category.

AOfficial source

Regulatory, public-health, or professional source notes used for boundaries and wording restraint.

BClinical or peer-reviewed

Human studies, reviews, or measurement papers that can support narrow source-backed statements.

CTechnical guidance

Cosmetic science, stability, package, temperature, or method references that require product-specific context.

XNot a public claim

Wording that should route to claim-boundary pages rather than appear as product-facing language.

Formula and package support limitsCosmetic stability testingRoutine timing and source contextPost-bath moisturizing timingExperience language boundaryPerceived vs measured absorptionTemperature and hot-zone testing pathThermal mappingScent, sensitivity, and source limitsFragrance and essential-oil boundaryRepeated-use and formula contextPreservative system boundaryBarrier wording without overclaimingCeramide and barrier language

Evidence and claim map

Claim boundaries
Evidence areaWhat it can supportRoute
Formula supportCosmetic stability and repeated-use entries can support why product-specific testing matters.View route
Temperature supportThermal mapping and contact-temperature curves can support measured temperature language only within a defined protocol.View route
Experience languageCooling, wetness, and perceived absorption entries can explain user language without proving outcomes.View route
Ingredient boundariesFragrance, preservatives, ceramide, and stratum-corneum entries route ingredient wording to source limits.View route
Claim routingWhen evidence cannot support a stronger statement, route readers to the relevant claim boundary instead.View route

Directory pathways

Publishing rule

Evidence pages explain what a source area can and cannot support. They should not convert user feel, formula category, or ingredient presence into a universal performance, safety, baby, pregnancy, or compatibility claim.