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Are there any press releases or news articles linking Steven Guntry to Iron Boost endorsements?

Checked on November 21, 2025
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Executive summary

Available search results show multiple press releases, product pages, and podcast transcripts tying Dr. Steven Gundry (also styled “Steven Gundry” or “Dr. Steven Gundry”) to Gundry MD products and promotions, but none of the provided sources mention a person named “Steven Guntry” or link that name to endorsements of a product called “Iron Boost.” The record in these results consistently references “Gundry” not “Guntry,” and covers Gundry MD products such as Energy Renew, Polyphenol-Rich Olive Oil, and other supplements [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]. Available sources do not mention “Iron Boost” or an endorsement by “Steven Guntry” (not found in current reporting).

1. What the results actually show: Gundry — not Guntry — is widely promoted

The documents returned by the search are press releases, product pages, and podcast episodes that name Dr. Steven Gundry and Gundry MD as the promoter or creator of supplements and wellness programs — for example, a Nov. 7, 2025 press release for a “Total Body Transformation” plan (Morningstar/PR Newswire) and PR Newswire items about Gundry MD olive oil and award wins [1] [3] [4]. Reviews and promotional copy for Energy Renew and other Gundry MD energy supplements also appear across newswire and company sites [2] [5] [6]. Those items repeatedly present Gundry as the figure associated with product endorsements and launches [1] [3] [4].

2. No hits for “Steven Guntry” — likely a name mismatch or typo

None of the supplied materials include the name “Steven Guntry.” Instead every relevant promotional item and product page references “Steven Gundry” or “Dr. Steven Gundry” [1] [3] [4] [6]. Given this consistent pattern, the most plausible explanation from these sources is a transcription, spelling, or memory error in the query; the available reporting links endorsements to Gundry, not Guntry (not found in current reporting).

3. No mention of a product named “Iron Boost” in these items

The supplied results list several Gundry MD supplements and themed products — Energy Renew, polyphenol-rich olive oil, Bio Complete 3, and other energy or gut-focused items — and describe ingredients and marketing claims for those products [2] [5] [6] [4]. None of the pages or press releases in the dataset mention a product called “Iron Boost.” Therefore available sources do not support a link between “Iron Boost” and the Gundry materials in this set (not found in current reporting).

4. What is documented about Gundry’s endorsements and product claims

When sources do attribute endorsements or origin claims, they consistently name Dr. Steven Gundry as founder of Gundry MD and describe him as the developer of specific formulations and programs. Press releases emphasize his role — e.g., presenting the Total Body Transformation Plan, launching polyphenol-rich olive oil, and awarding products at the Nourish Awards — and product pages enumerate ingredients and claimed benefits for existing Gundry MD supplements [1] [3] [4] [6]. Independent review-like pages republished via newswire reiterate those product descriptions and user-review tallies for Energy Renew [2] [5].

5. How to proceed if you want verification or correction

If your intent was to ask about Dr. Steven Gundry and an “Iron Boost” product, search the exact name “Steven Gundry Iron Boost” or the product name “Iron Boost” across presswire, company pages, and mainstream news outlets; the current dataset does not include that phrase (not found in current reporting). If the person you meant is indeed “Steven Guntry” (a different individual), provide additional identifying details or authoritative sources; the supplied search results contain no references to that name and cannot confirm any link (not found in current reporting).

6. Caveats and agendas in the available sources

Most items in this set are company-produced press releases, product pages, or marketing/review aggregations, which naturally present promotional viewpoints and emphasize benefits and awards; examples include PR Newswire releases and Gundry MD product pages [1] [3] [4] [6]. These sources have implicit commercial agendas to sell products and build the founder’s brand, so independent reporting or peer-reviewed studies would be needed to corroborate health claims. The dataset contains no independent investigative reporting or third‑party scientific appraisal relevant to an “Iron Boost” claim (not found in current reporting).

Want to dive deeper?
Who is Steven Guntry and what is his public profile or background?
What is Iron Boost and what endorsements or promotional partners has it publicly listed?
Are there press releases, trademark filings, or business records linking Steven Guntry to Iron Boost?
Have reputable news outlets or fact-checkers reported any connection between Steven Guntry and Iron Boost endorsements?
Can archived web pages, social media posts, or press release distributors show past endorsement claims involving Steven Guntry and Iron Boost?