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When and on which platforms did Steven Guntry post about Iron Boost (e.g., Facebook, X, Instagram, personal website)?
Executive summary
Available reporting and the provided web results do not show any posts by “Steven Guntry” about a product called Iron Boost; most material in the search set concerns Dr. Steven Gundry and Gundry MD products such as Energy Renew and polyphenol-rich olive oil (e.g., Gundry MD product pages and PR notices) [1] [2] [3]. There is one unrelated GitHub listing and several consumer-review pages about a product named “Iron Booster” or “Iron Booster Male Enhancement,” but none of the supplied sources show Steven Guntry posting about “Iron Boost” on Facebook, X, Instagram, or a personal website [4] [5].
1. What the records actually show about “Steven Guntry” and “Iron Boost”
A review of the supplied results finds no entries for a person named “Steven Guntry” and no documented social posts by that name regarding a product called Iron Boost. The name closest in the sources is Dr. Steven Gundry, a public figure who promotes Gundry MD products across websites and social channels [1] [6]. Separate items reference an “Iron Booster” product in user-generated places like GitHub and Trustpilot, but those pages do not attribute posts to any “Steven Guntry” or to Dr. Gundry [4] [5].
2. Where Gundry (not Guntry) posts product content in the available sources
The supplied sources show Dr. Steven Gundry publishing product information and commentary via Gundry MD’s official website and related product pages (e.g., shop and blog pages) and through PR/newswire releases about Gundry MD products such as Energy Renew and polyphenol-rich olive oil [1] [7] [3] [2]. Media placements and guest articles (e.g., CNBC contributor pieces, podcast appearances) point to social handles like @drstevengundry on Instagram and other platforms in broader reporting, but those are citations about Gundry, not about an Iron Boost product from “Steven Guntry” [8] [9].
3. The “Iron Booster / Iron Boost” items in the results — what they are and limits of the evidence
A GitHub repository titled Iron-Booster-Male-Enhancement frames itself as a promotional or review page for “Iron Booster,” and a Trustpilot page exists for an Iron Booster site [4] [5]. These pages appear to be marketing or review-era entries for a male-enhancement supplement, not verifiable posts by a named individual on mainstream social platforms. The sources do not link those pages to any verified social media accounts or to a “Steven Guntry” identity [4] [5]. Available sources do not mention direct Facebook/X/Instagram posts by “Steven Guntry” about Iron Boost.
4. Possible explanations and competing interpretations
One interpretation: the query conflates two different names/products — Steven Gundry (well-documented wellness entrepreneur) and Iron Booster (a product referenced in scattered web listings). That would explain why Gundry-centric sources list many Gundry MD products but make no mention of Iron Boost [1] [2]. Another interpretation: “Steven Guntry” could be a minor or local promoter whose posts aren’t indexed in the supplied dataset; in that case, the absence in these sources does not prove such posts don’t exist — it only shows they aren’t present in the provided reporting (not found in current reporting).
5. What we can and cannot conclude from these sources
We can conclude the supplied material documents Dr. Steven Gundry’s product activity on his website, podcast transcripts, and PR channels, and shows separate, non-linked listings for an “Iron Booster” product on GitHub and review sites [1] [4] [5]. We cannot conclude that “Steven Guntry” posted about “Iron Boost” on Facebook, X, Instagram, or a personal site because the provided sources do not contain any such posts or attributions (available sources do not mention Steven Guntry posting about Iron Boost).
6. Next steps if you want definitive platform-level proof
To verify whether a specific person posted about Iron Boost and on which platforms, search direct social-platform archives (Facebook, X/Twitter, Instagram) for the exact username[10], review Wayback/archived pages, or request logs/screenshots from the account owner. The supplied sources do not include direct social-media posts or archives for “Steven Guntry” or an “Iron Boost” post, so platform-level confirmation is not possible from this dataset (available sources do not mention platform posts by Steven Guntry about Iron Boost).