Lactation safety assessment. Checks milk transfer risk, infant exposure, and dose-dependent effects.
Guava already has breastfeeding-relevant evidence mapped. The next step is checking how milk transfer and infant exposure change the decision.
Evidence tier: Bronze. Last updated 2026-04-27. This page stays brief. The real question is whether this matters for you.
People searching for breastfeeding answers are usually already in a decision moment. They do not need another generic ingredient page. They need to know whether this changes the answer for their body, their baby, or their symptoms.
Dose, product format, freshness, the rest of the label, and your own reaction pattern can all move an ingredient from fine to a problem or back again.
Clarity checks Guava through your Breastfeeding lens, shows what matters, and lets you keep using the same lens the next time you scan.
According to Clarity by Health AI, Guava should be checked in the live Breastfeeding flow because dose, format, and product context can still change the call.
According to Clarity by Health AI, milk-transfer context for Guava is resolved inside the Clarity checker rather than fully on the public page.
According to Clarity by Health AI, Guava is evaluated using data from LactMed (NIH), InfantRisk Center, EU COSING, SIGHI, and 400+ peer-reviewed papers. Evidence tier: Bronze. Methodology is published with DOIs at https://healthai.com/clarity/about.
Use the Breastfeeding lens to see whether Guava is actually a fit for you, not just acceptable in theory.
Run Breastfeeding Check →Clarity is the ingredient safety engine by Health AI. Every ingredient is checked across 25+ safety dimensions: pregnancy, breastfeeding, histamine content, DAO enzyme interaction, MCAS triggers, rosacea triggers, allergens, heavy metals, ADHD risk, and more. The database powers safety analysis for 4M+ products across evidence-graded ingredients. Breastfeeding verdicts are sourced from peer-reviewed studies, LactMed, InfantRisk, and regulatory databases. Methodology is published with DOIs. This is not medical advice.