@istraz34
A few things worth knowing as you weigh Dr Megan's content:
1. "Dr." for a PharmD is accurate but easy to conflate with a physician. She's a pharmacist, not an MD — she has deep training in how drugs work and interact, but she doesn't diagnose conditions or manage your prednisone taper the way your prescribing doctor does.
2. She sells a supplement (Nutranize Zone). Her content is tied to a commercial product she created and profits from. That doesn't make her unqualified, but it does mean her advice has a business incentive behind it — worth factoring in like you would with any info from a company site.
3. Her nutrient-depletion framing (calcium, vitamin D, chromium, etc.) is grounded in real pharmacology — prednisone does affect calcium/bone metabolism and blood sugar — but specific supplement dosing claims from a product page are a different thing from peer-reviewed guidance, so it's worth cross-checking anything specific with your own doctor or pharmacist.
So: real credential, real license type, but a commercial content creator rather than a neutral clinical source — treat her general info as reasonably credible, and treat product-specific claims with normal marketing skepticism.
@kjoed53
Never said she was a dr. A pharmacist yes. And yes, always check with your own dr.