Dr. Trust Me BroDr. Trust Me BroIndependent data journalism · wry humor

/api/archive/snapshots/0356057f0aa2440556355178c8dc660fcf07d0aed9024626ac1c97e373e31d37/page.html

View dossier →

Jaban M Moore alias Dr. Fishy Funnel

Instagram · 254503634

Practice location

925 Charlotte Street

Kansas City, MO 64106

Bottom line

Funnel-first framing that runs on persuasion, light on published evidence.

Dr. Trust Me Bro says

Oh, look at Jaban Moore, the omega-3 whisperer, telling you to comment 'FISHY' so he can slide you his 'favorite' supplement in the DMs like a secret drug deal. He's not just selling fish oil; he's selling the thrill of bypassing the public eye to get his proprietary stack, because apparently, the only way to get healthy is through a private, unmonitored link. Truly, the king of the 'comment for a link' grift, turning your engagement into his affiliate commission.

82/100

High grift signals

3 critical2 high0 medium0 low

Score breakdown

0/100
Credentials
The license is real; the lane it is driving in is not. Public scope records flag this doc bro practicing well past what that license actually authorizes.
81/100
Manipulation
High due to the 'comment to unlock' tactic which bypasses public scrutiny and the use of 'favorite' to imply unearned authority.
82/100
Sales funnel
Very high because the entire post is a funnel designed to drive private sales of a specific supplement brand without public disclosure.
40/100
Grift map
The funnel is a direct engagement-to-DM sales pitch, a common grift pattern for supplement influencers.
0/100
Evidence gap
The claim to check 'deficiencies' is vague and unsupported by specific clinical context in this clip.
78/100
Bro energy
High because the influencer uses engagement bait and a 'personal favorite' claim to sell a product, a classic bro-marketing pattern.

Direct answer

Jaban M Moore is licensed in Missouri as a chiropractor (DC), not as an MD or DO, and Missouri's chiropractic scope statute (Mo. Rev. Stat. §331.010 (20 CSR 2070)) limits that license to musculoskeletal care, not the diagnosis or treatment of systemic disease. Even so, they advertise diagnosing or treating Have you checked these deficiencies?, conditions that belong with appropriately board-certified physicians. Those same pages route patients toward supplements and paid programs that Jaban M Moore profits from.

Key findings

  • Sales Funnel Motive: The influencer uses a fake engagement trigger (commenting a keyword) to bypass platform algorithms and directly funnel users into a private sales channel (DM) where they can pitch a proprietary supplement without public scrutiny or disclosure.see section ↓
  • Claim "Have you checked these deficiencies?": mixed in the medical literature.see section ↓
  • NPI registry confirms Jaban Moore as Chiropractor (DC) in Missouri (NPI 1073958815).see section ↓
  • Jaban M Moore shows credential inflation relative to stated vs likely credentials.see section ↓
  • Dr Jaban M Moore is marketed with a doctor title, but reviewed credentials indicate Chiropractor (DC) rather than an MD/DO physician license.see section ↓
  • Against Missouri State Board of Chiropractic Examiners scope rules (Mo. Rev. Stat. §331.010 (20 CSR 2070)), these advertised activities appear outside Jaban M Moore's license (including conditions they merely list as ones they treat): Have you checked these deficiencies?.see section ↓
  • 1 of 1 advertised activities fall outside permitted Chiropractor scope in MO.see section ↓
  • The pattern is a classic engagement bait: trigger a comment to bypass public scrutiny, then privately DM a link to a specific supplement brand. The money flow is likely a direct affiliate commission or referral fee from the supplement sale, hidden behind a 'personal favorite' claim.see section ↓

Claims & evidence

1 advertised condition or treatment fall outside their license scope. Each box leads with state-board scope notation; literature cross-check follows when we matched a specific claim. Every card carries its receipts: the quoted wording, a live source link, and an archived copy.

Outside scopeListed service

Jaban M Moore is not licensed or approved by Missouri State Board of Chiropractic Examiners to advertise Have you checked these deficiencies? as within their scope of practice.

Have you checked these deficiencies?

Supports
The claim is too vague to be directly supported because it does not specify which deficiencies are being asked about. For hypertension, evidence-based guidelines support evaluating patients for secondary causes and contributing factors when clinically indicated, rather than assuming a generic deficiency screen. [1][5][6][8] For nutrition-related conditions, ASPEN and ESPEN guidelines support targeted assessment for malnutrition and micronutrient problems in relevant disease states; in inflammatory bowel disease, micronutrient deficiencies are common and iron deficiency treatment is strongly recommended, including parenteral iron if necessary. [2][3][4]
Contradicts
No high-quality evidence supports a blanket, unspecific question like "Have you checked these deficiencies? " as a universal claim across all patients or conditions. The hypertension guideline paper is about blood-pressure management and does not establish routine deficiency testing as a standard part of hypertension care. [1][5][6][7][8] The IBD guideline explicitly says routine provision of a special diet is not supported, which underscores that interventions should be indication-specific rather than broadly presumed. The evidence base is also condition-dependent, and the index list includes several trial registrations that do not provide completed peer-reviewed outcome data, so they do not strengthen the claim.
Mainstream view
Mainstream medical practice is to check deficiencies only when there is a clinical indication, risk factor, or disease context that makes them plausible. [2][4] In nutritional disorders and malabsorption syndromes such as intestinal failure or inflammatory bowel disease, guidelines support targeted screening for malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies. [3] In hypertension, routine deficiency screening is not a standard evidence-based part of care; management focuses on blood pressure measurement, lifestyle change, cardiovascular risk assessment, and antihypertensive treatment when indicated. [1][5][6][7][8] Deterministic PubMed cross-check found no matching indexed studies for these terms (absence of indexed evidence is not evidence against the claim).
In their own wordsWatch sourceArchived copy

Have you checked these deficiencies?👀

Rule: Mo. Rev. Stat. §331.010 (20 CSR 2070)

Manipulation

Critical

Sales Funnel Motive

transcript · cited

The influencer uses a fake engagement trigger (commenting a keyword) to bypass platform algorithms and directly funnel users into a private sales channel (DM) where they can pitch a proprietary supplement without public scrutiny or disclosure. Likely motive: To drive private sales of a specific supplement brand while avoiding public comment-section scrutiny or FTC disclosure requirements that apply to visible posts.

Comment 'FISHY' and I'll send you my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement!

High

Testimonial Overload

transcript · cited

Using the subjective term 'favorite' implies a personal endorsement and superior efficacy without providing clinical evidence, leveraging the influencer's persona to validate the product. Likely motive: To create a false sense of personal trust and product superiority to increase conversion rates.

my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement

Borrowed authority & guest funnel

No guests are present; the host uses a self-funnel tactic by directing users to comment for a private link to their product.

Host self-funnel

Comment 'FISHY' and I'll send you my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement!

Self-funnel quoteView source

Comment 'FISHY' and I'll send you my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement!

The host routes viewers to their own consult/booking links.

Commerce & grift map

The pattern is a classic engagement bait: trigger a comment to bypass public scrutiny, then privately DM a link to a specific supplement brand. The money flow is likely a direct affiliate commission or referral fee from the supplement sale, hidden behind a 'personal favorite' claim.

No on-surface disclosure

No paid-promotion disclosure appears on this instagram content. Viewers who arrive directly never learn the creator may be compensated by favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement.

High

No on-surface paid-promotion disclosure

vendorDisclosureGap

No paid-promotion disclosure appears on this instagram content. Viewers who arrive directly never learn the creator may be compensated by favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement.

Critical

No FTC-style compensation disclosure

compensationDisclosures · scan

High

The influencer likely receives a commission or referral fee for directing users to their 'favorite' supplement via a private DM link.

affiliate_link

High

Host self-funnel around guest content

guestCollaboration · selfFunnel

Host routes viewers to their own consult/booking links around the guest segment.

Supplements pitched

  • favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement

    my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement

How the money flows

  • Affiliate / promo linkUndisclosed The influencer likely receives a commission or referral fee for directing users to their 'favorite' supplement via a private DM link.Comment 'FISHY' and I'll send you my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement!
    Kickback quoteView source

    Comment 'FISHY' and I'll send you my favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplement!

Sponsors and advertisers

Brands, advertisers, and agencies connected to this content, based on what it promotes and discloses.

  • favorite omega-3 fatty acid supplementBrand

    Named on a surface without a compensation disclosure

Credentials & scope

Glossary: Chiropractor (“Dr.”)

Stated: none · Likely: Chiropractor

Verified against the federal provider registry: D.C. · Chiropractor · MO license 2013013283.

No credentials are explicitly stated in this short-form clip; the channel name 'Jaban Moore' implies a doctorate, but the clip itself provides no breakdown of licensure or scope.

  • Chiropractor (DC), Doctor of Chiropractic

    Under Missouri law (RSMo Chapter 331, esp. §331.010), chiropractic is the science and art of examining and adjusting the articulations of the human body, particularly the spinal column, to remove nerve interference. It expressly excludes operative surgery, obstetrics, and the administration or prescribing of any drug or medicine, and does not authorize the practice of medicine or osteopathy. Diagnosing or treating systemic disease (e.g. Lyme disease, thyroid disorders, autoimmune disease, cancer) as primary medical care, ordering or interpreting labs to manage such disease, and recommending or selling treatments for them generally fall outside Missouri chiropractic scope. Board regulations appear at 20 CSR 2070.

    Confirmed against the federal provider registry

Permitted scope vs advertised

Missouri State Board of Chiropractic Examiners · Confidence: high

In Missouri, the practice of chiropractic is defined as the examination, diagnosis, adjustment, manipulation and treatment by methods commonly taught in accredited chiropractic colleges, and explicitly excludes operative surgery, obstetrics, podiatry, osteopathy, prescribing or administering drugs, and the practice of medicine.[1][5] Chiropractors may also perform meridian therapy, acupressure, and acupuncture with board-required certification.[1][5] They must hold a state chiropractic license and comply with board rules such as those governing specialized procedures like manipulation under anesthesia.[3][4][5]

What this license permits

  • Spinal adjustment and manipulation
  • Musculoskeletal evaluation and treatment
  • Soft-tissue and rehabilitative care
  • Headache care within musculoskeletal scope

1 of 1 advertised activities fall outside permitted scope.

AdvertisedVerdict
Listed service Have you checked these deficiencies?
Rule: Mo. Rev. Stat. §331.010 (20 CSR 2070)
Not listed among permitted DC scope activities under the governing practice act.
Outside scope

Sources: Missouri Revised Statutes §331.010 – Practice of chiropractic, definition (official), Missouri Board of Chiropractic Examiners – Statutes page (official), Missouri Revised Statutes §331.030 – Application for license; practice without license prohibited (official), 20 CSR 2070-2.033 – Manipulation Under Anesthesia (official)

Validated associated properties

Surfaces tied to this Doc Bro by domain, branding, or funnel routing. Third-party platforms are labeled as routes, not as owned properties.

Analyzed

Tip the jar

Report useful? Optional tips help keep scans, archives, and literature cross-checks running. They never change conclusions.

Submission efcqBdMzIfz8rwVJ69X8T

Tip in appreciation

Fight disinformation

Log a public thread where Jaban M Moore is spreading nonsense, get a copy-paste reply with this report link.

5threads logged
5community links
5new this week

Log a new mention

Reply snippets

Full reply

Before you buy the protocol: Dr. Trust Me Bro fact-checked Jaban M Moore's claims with peer-reviewed sources, https://drtrustmebro.com/analyze/efcqBdMzIfz8rwVJ69X8T. White-coat charisma isn't evidence.

Short link drop

Full DTMB scan on Jaban M Moore: https://drtrustmebro.com/analyze/efcqBdMzIfz8rwVJ69X8T

Drop these in YouTube comments, Reddit threads, and forums, link back to this scan, not vibes.

Recent mentions (this doc)

Browse all logged mentions →

Nudge the Doc Bro

We email a public contact address from their site so Jaban M Moore can review this dossier and dispute anything we got wrong.

Pick a contact address

Scraped from their public site during analysis. Wrong address? Use site feedback instead.

What gets sent

Subject

Jaban M Moore has made it to Wall of Fame spot #3 on Dr. Trust Me Bro!

Message

Hi Jaban M Moore, A reader thought you might want to see what Dr. Trust Me Bro documented from your public posts and website: https://drtrustmebro.com/influencer/LHGCVS_CZpjf-As5HKrmZ#report Dr. Trust Me Bro is a group of independent data journalists: we quote your own public claims, timestamp the lines, and cross-check them against peer-reviewed literature. The wry humor is deliberate so readers remember the pitch before they buy the protocol. If we got something wrong, file a whambulance challenge from your official business email. Verified disputes are posted publicly next to the report: https://drtrustmebro.com/whambulance If we got it right, maybe ease up on the supplement funnel before the next grandma buys certainty in a bottle. Or if you are someone that works on Jaban M Moore's team then consider our whistleblower program and air some grievances or highlight where we could dial in our investigation. visit https://drtrustmebro.com/whistleblower or send an email to whistleblower@drtrustmebro.com This note was sent by a reader through DTMB's nudge button. Thanks for reading (or ignoring), Someone who prefers evidence over white-coat charisma -Data Journalists cranking out truth with wry humor with serious citations.

We send this for you from whambulance@drtrustmebro.com. Prefer your own mail client? Copy the text instead.

Know someone who can help?

If you think someone has firsthand information about Jaban M Moore, send them an encouraging note. We email a short, respectful message with this report and clear instructions on how to write in, on the record or anonymously.

Who should we nudge?

We do not store this address for any mailing list. Please only nudge people you think would genuinely want to hear from us.

What gets sent

Subject

Do you have firsthand context on Jaban M Moore?

Message

Hi, A reader of Dr. Trust Me Bro thought you might know something firsthand about Jaban M Moore and the public claims we documented here: https://drtrustmebro.com/influencer/LHGCVS_CZpjf-As5HKrmZ#report We are independent journalists that are focused on uncovering grift and manipulation perpetrated by medical practitioners that are operating outside their licensed scope. We want to hear from insiders: employees, former employees, accountants, billing staff, sales reps, IT staff, anyone who knows. Worth telling us about Jaban M Moore: - Medicaid or Medicare overbilling - Care plans structured to funnel someone's grandma toward an upsell for money. - Insight into the real reason they refuse insurance, Medicaid, or Medicare, not the version they give the public - Upselling unnecessary tests and panels - Kickbacks for lab, vendor, or other referrals - Discussions or policy, written or otherwise, that steers patients away from physicians properly licensed for the care Jaban M Moore is treating out of scope - Any scheme to squeeze a few more dollars out of grandma We are especially interested in how Jaban M Moore handled payment and coverage: were people told to swipe an FSA or HSA card at checkout, handed a superbill or receipt to submit themselves, or told the service is not covered by insurance, Medicare, or Medicaid? Here is why that matters: https://drtrustmebro.com/patterns/fsa-hsa-loophole You can reach the confidential tip line here, on the record or anonymously: https://drtrustmebro.com/whistleblower You can also simply hit reply to this email and start the conversation here. You do not have to give your name. Add whatever context, dates, or links you are comfortable sharing, and leave out anything you are not. There is no pressure to respond, and you can ignore this message if it is not relevant to you. This message was sent by a reader through Dr. Trust Me Bro's website. Your address was entered by that reader, not collected by us, and is not added to any mailing list. Independent data journalism, serious citations.

We send this on your behalf from our tip line address. It links the public report and the confidential tip line, and never claims wrongdoing.

Firsthand details help most: how payment and coverage were handled (FSA/HSA card vs. a superbill to submit, declining Medicare/Medicaid). More on the FSA/HSA loophole.

Whambulance

Challenge this scan or Wall of Fame entry for Jaban M Moore. Public log, not legal arbitration.

Wall of Fame entryJaban M Moore · vibes-based "doctor," Chasing Health Ambassador Program

ID: LHGCVS_CZpjf-As5HKrmZ · Wall of Fame

View wall card →
0total challenges
0open
0posted log

Public challenge log

No posted Wall of Fame challenges linked yet.

Challenges are public on the Wall of Fame card. DTMB does not remove entries for hurt feelings, primary sources or copy corrections only.

File a challenge

Include in your email:

  • Doc Bro ID: LHGCVS_CZpjf-As5HKrmZ
  • Wall entry: /influencer/LHGCVS_CZpjf-As5HKrmZ
  • Analysis ID: efcqBdMzIfz8rwVJ69X8T
  • Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/DGEqotQM_yu/
  • Why this entry or scan should change
  • Supporting links (one per line)
  • Your business email (for verified disputes)

Verified challenges are posted publicly on the report. Public log, not legal arbitration.

Send whambulance, disputes@drtrustmebro.com

Whambulance form →

Citations

Peer-reviewed and index sources cited in this report.

  1. [1] Guideline-Driven Management of Hypertension: An Evidence-Based Update.PubMed / MEDLINE · Circ Res · 2021 Apr 2
  2. [2] ASPEN-FELANPE Clinical Guidelines.PubMed / MEDLINE · JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr · 2017 Jan
  3. [3] ESPEN guideline: Clinical nutrition in inflammatory bowel disease.PubMed / MEDLINE · Clin Nutr · 2017 Apr
  4. [4] When Is Parenteral Nutrition Appropriate?PubMed / MEDLINE · JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr · 2017 Mar
  5. [5] Guideline-Driven Management of HypertensionAcademic literature search · 2021-04-02
  6. [6] Outpatient management of essential hypertension: a review based on the latest clinical guidelinesAcademic literature search · 2024-04-11
  7. [7] Hypertension Pharmacological Treatment in Adults: A World Health Organization Guideline Executive SummaryAcademic literature search · 2021-11-15
  8. [8] Editors' Commentary on the 2023 ESH Management of Arterial Hypertension Guidelines.Academic literature search · 2023-06-24