Science and Evidence
Evidence informed, not fear based.
Our evidence standard
Micro Detox uses trusted public health sources, scientific reviews, and careful exposure reduction principles. We focus on practical guidance families can use without panic.
Source types we prioritize
- Government health agencies
- Public health institutions
- Scientific advisory bodies
- Peer reviewed review papers
- Academic research
How we write about risk
We avoid extreme or absolute claims. We use careful wording such as may be associated with, research suggests, commonly associated with, can be found in some products, and reducing avoidable exposure may be a practical precaution.
Why cautious wording matters
Product formulas change. Exposure depends on amount, frequency, product use, age, ventilation, heat, skin contact, and many other factors. Scientific evidence can be strong for some concerns and weaker or still emerging for others.
Important limit
Micro Detox explains what to check, why it may matter, and what practical alternatives exist. It does not diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any condition.
Our evidence scale
Not every concern sits at the same level of certainty. Here is how we weigh what we share, so you can judge it for yourself.
Widely recognised by public health agencies or regulatory bodies. The concern is well documented — though the right response still depends on amount, frequency, and context.
Supported by a growing body of research, but not yet settled. We share it with careful wording and note where the science is still developing.
Evidence is limited or mixed, but the alternative is simple and low-regret — so reducing avoidable exposure may be a sensible, low-cost precaution.
We never say a product causes or cures a condition. Everything here is about lowering avoidable exposure in everyday routines, not treating health.