BioStacks
One A Day

Menopause Formula

1 Tablet · 50 servings · $0.38/serving

1 / 100Very Poor

Score Breakdown

Formulation
50
Safety
1
Final score
1/100

Ingredients (23)

Molybdenum

100%

Dose

37500 mcg

Target

45–75 mcg

Form

Vitamin B6

100%

Dose

8 mg

Target

1.3–25 mg

Form

Soybean Isoflavones

100%

Dose

60 mg

Target

40–90 mg

Form

Niacin

80%

Dose

20 mg

Target

25–500 mg

Form

Pantothenic Acid

30%

Dose

15 mg

Target

50–500 mg

Form

Other Ingredients (12)

Blue 2 LakeColorant

A synthetic coal-tar/petroleum-derived dye used purely for color, linked to behavioral concerns in sensitive children. The lake form adds aluminum. No health benefit — we flag all artificial colors.

FD&C Red No. 40 LakeColorant

Same petroleum-derived azo dye as Red 40, linked to hyperactivity in children (Southampton study) and carrying an EU warning label; pure cosmetic color with zero benefit.

Titanium DioxideColorant

Banned in the EU (2022) over concerns that its ultra-fine particles may damage DNA in gut cells. Still allowed in the US. Used only for white coloring — provides no health benefit.

MaltodextrinBinder

Spikes blood sugar faster than table sugar (glycemic index 85–105). Research links it to gut bacteria changes that may promote intestinal inflammation (Nickerson et al. 2015). Used as a cheap filler — adds nothing beneficial.

Beta-Carotene (color)Color

Beta-carotene used in small amounts as a colorant/antioxidant.

Polyethylene Glycol (Coating)Coating

A polyether polymer used as a tablet coating and plasticizer

Silicon DioxideAnti-caking

Fine silica powder used to prevent clumping

Croscarmellose SodiumDisintegrant

Cross-linked cellulose derivative used as a superdisintegrant

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Sources & Scoring

Nutrient data (RDA, UL, and safety thresholds) sourced from: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and National Academies Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI).

This is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making changes to your supplement routine.

The score analyzes what's on the label: ingredient doses vs. clinical ranges, chemical forms, evidence levels, and known interactions. It does not verify label accuracy or test for contaminants — for that, look for third-party certifications like USP or NSF.