Medical disclaimer

The information provided on FlowForceMaxi is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified healthcare provider.

Not medical advice

Robert Chen, MS, the lead author of FlowForceMaxi, is an editorial researcher with a Master of Science in Nutritional Sciences. He is not a licensed medical doctor, registered dietitian, or other licensed healthcare provider, and the content on this site does not constitute medical advice. Readers should not act on information from this site without consulting a qualified healthcare professional.

Dietary supplement statements

FlowForce Max and other dietary supplements discussed on this site are dietary supplements, not pharmaceutical drugs. Statements about dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Dietary supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Consult your physician

You should always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any dietary supplement, particularly if you:

Not for emergency use

Information on this site is not intended for the diagnosis or treatment of any medical emergency. If you are experiencing a medical emergency — including signs of acute urinary retention, blood in urine, severe pain, or any other emergency symptoms — call 911 (in the United States) or your local emergency services immediately, or go to the nearest emergency department.

Individual results vary

Individual response to dietary supplements varies meaningfully based on age, baseline health status, severity of any underlying conditions, concurrent medications, lifestyle factors, and other variables. Results discussed on this site, or reported by other users in publicly available reviews, are not guarantees of what any specific individual will experience.

Ongoing medical care is essential

Dietary supplements do not replace appropriate medical care. Men over 50 should continue routine prostate health monitoring including PSA testing and digital rectal examination as recommended by their physician, regardless of supplement use. Supplements should be considered an adjunct to — not a replacement for — appropriate medical evaluation and care.

PSA testing considerations

Saw palmetto, a primary ingredient in FlowForce Max and many other prostate supplements, can modestly lower PSA values in research literature. If you take a saw palmetto-containing supplement and have a PSA test scheduled, inform your physician so PSA results can be interpreted appropriately. Some physicians recommend discontinuing saw palmetto supplements 2–4 weeks before PSA testing.

No physician-patient relationship

Reading content on this site does not create a physician-patient relationship between you and FlowForceMaxi, our author Robert Chen, or any other contributor. We cannot provide individualized medical advice, and we do not respond to specific medical questions about individual situations. Direct individual medical questions to a qualified healthcare provider.