What did @justagrownwoman actually say?
She told 220,000 viewers that people with RA and lupus are going into "remission" and testing negative for disease markers, and that the common thread is an AIP diet, a parasite cleanse, and daily BPC-157 and TB-500 peptides. She promised viewers they'd be "feeling so much better" within 30 to 60 days with "no side effects." She also told them they don't have to "suppress" their immune system anymore, framing immunosuppressive medications as essentially just ignoring symptoms rather than treating disease. The disclaimer "this is not medical advice" appeared once, sandwiched between very specific medical recommendations.
To be clear: she is telling people with serious, potentially organ-damaging autoimmune conditions to consider dropping standard-of-care treatment in favor of a supplement protocol she assembled from anecdotes. That framing matters, and we should not let the disclaimer erase it.
Does the science back this up?
Partially, in places, and not nearly enough to justify the confidence of this video. The AIP diet has real but modest supportive evidence. The peptides are fascinating but nowhere near proven for autoimmune disease. The parasite cleanse has essentially no credible clinical backing for this context.
On the AIP diet: a small 2017 pilot study by Konijeti et al. in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases found improvements in symptoms and inflammatory markers in Crohn's and colitis patients following the Autoimmune Protocol. That is not nothing. But the sample was 15 people, and there are no randomized controlled trials for RA or lupus specifically.
On BPC-157: rodent studies suggest anti-inflammatory and gut-healing properties (Sikiric et al., 2018, Current Pharmaceutical Design), but there are zero published human clinical trials for autoimmune disease. TB-500 has similarly compelling animal data and similarly zero human trial data for this purpose.
On parasite cleanses: there is no credible peer-reviewed evidence that over-the-counter parasite cleanses treat or reduce autoimmune disease activity. This claim is unsupported.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
She got the frustration right. People with RA and lupus are often undertreated, dismissed, or stuck on medications with brutal side effects. That's real, and it's worth saying out loud.
She got the gut-inflammation connection directionally right. There is legitimate research linking gut microbiome disruption to autoimmune conditions (Mu et al., 2017, Frontiers in Immunology). Food sensitivities can worsen inflammation. Suggesting an elimination diet as a complement to care is not crazy.
But she got several things plainly wrong. Immunosuppressive drugs for lupus and RA are not just "headphones" blocking pain signals. Medications like methotrexate and hydroxychloroquine slow structural joint damage and prevent organ failure. Framing them as symptom suppression that ignores the root cause is a dangerous oversimplification. People have died from untreated lupus nephritis. This is not abstract risk.
She also implied BPC-157 and TB-500 are established therapies for autoimmune remission. They are not. Saying peptides work for healing "down to the cell" is not a clinical claim, it is marketing language. The anecdotes she collected are not data. Remission in autoimmune disease can happen spontaneously, especially in lupus, and attributing it to a supplement stack without controls is not evidence.
What should you actually know?
If you have RA or lupus and you're curious about integrative approaches, that curiosity is legitimate. Dietary interventions, stress reduction, and gut health are areas of active research in rheumatology. None of that requires abandoning your rheumatologist or stopping medications without supervision.
BPC-157 and TB-500 are being studied for tissue repair and inflammation, and some clinicians do prescribe them off-label in supervised settings. But "off-label in a supervised clinical context" is a very different thing from "give yourself peptides every single day" based on a TikTok. Dosing, sourcing, and interactions matter, and none of that was addressed here.
The parasite cleanse recommendation has no meaningful clinical support for autoimmune disease and should be ignored unless a physician has identified a specific parasitic infection through testing.
Anyone managing a serious autoimmune condition should work with a rheumatologist before changing their medication regimen. If you want to explore integrative options, an integrative medicine physician or a functional medicine provider who works alongside your specialist is the appropriate path, not a 30-to-60-day self-directed protocol from social media.