Linus Pauling
Two-time Nobel laureate. Coined "orthomolecular medicine" in 1968. Established vitamin C's role in collagen synthesis and disease.
— foundationsAsk any health question. Get answers grounded in the work of Pauling, Hoffer, Klenner, Cathcart, and Pfeiffer — with citations to the actual sources. Track your supplements. Decode your labs. Spot patterns before you crash.
It's built on a specific body of medical knowledge — orthomolecular medicine — that mainstream practice has largely overlooked for over half a century. Every answer is personalized to your biochemistry, your stack, your history. The more you use it, the more it learns about you specifically.
Coined by Linus Pauling in 1968, orthomolecular medicine treats disease and preserves health by adjusting the concentrations of substances normally present in the human body — vitamins, minerals, amino acids, fatty acids — to their optimal levels for each individual.
Not a fringe idea. A different starting question. Where mainstream medicine asks what drug treats this symptom?, orthomolecular asks what is this person's biochemistry actually short of, and at what dose does it correct?
Optimum nutrition is the medicine of tomorrow.
Every answer olivetwell gives is grounded in primary sources from the field's foundational figures — not opinion, not vibes, not Reddit threads. When the app cites a megadose protocol or a deficiency pattern, you can trace it back to who said it, where, and when.
Two-time Nobel laureate. Coined "orthomolecular medicine" in 1968. Established vitamin C's role in collagen synthesis and disease.
— foundationsPioneer of niacin therapy for schizophrenia. First double-blind trials in psychiatry. Founder of orthomolecular psychiatry.
— mental healthTreated polio, viral hepatitis, and tetanus with intravenous vitamin C in 1940s–50s North Carolina. Pioneer of high-dose ascorbate.
— ascorbateDefined "bowel tolerance" titration of vitamin C. Established that demand rises in proportion to disease severity.
— titrationIdentified pyroluria, copper-zinc imbalance, and methylation patterns in mental illness. Founder of the Princeton Brain Bio Center.
— biochemistrySix capabilities in one app. Not a chatbot bolted onto a tracker. A coherent system for someone serious about understanding their own biochemistry.
Personalized to your biochemistry, your stack, your history. Citations to primary sources, every time. The more you use it, the more it learns about you specifically.
Doses, timing, brands, costs. Watch what your stack actually does over weeks and months — not just the day you took it.
Upload bloodwork. Get an orthomolecular reading — not "in normal range," but where your individual values sit relative to optimal.
Structured n=1 protocols. Define hypothesis, dose, duration, endpoints. Track outcomes against a real baseline instead of guessing.
Pattern detection across symptoms, sleep, stack changes, lab markers. See the dip three weeks before you crash, not after.
A structured curriculum on orthomolecular medicine — vitamins, minerals, megadose protocols, the biochemistry behind it. Not blog posts. A real syllabus.
"In normal range" was
never really an answer.
Android first, then iOS. Drop your email and we'll let you know the day it ships.
We'll only email you about the iOS launch. Privacy.