Excipients and fillers are listed as “non-medicinal ingredients” on supplement bottle. They are listed in descending order from the most use to the least used within a given product. It is required by law that all supplement list non-medicinal ingredients. This law however, does not hold true in the pharmaceutical world. Drug companies are not required to list the non-medicinal ingredients on dispensing labels. The pharmacist is given a list of the “non-medicinal ingredients”
I suspect that GMO soybeans are usually bad for people's health causing the problems that people blame soybeans for but non GMO soybeans are good for people's health in moderation so they do not go abive the upper limits of nutrients in people who are not allergic to soybeans
Fermented organic soy in small amounts is okay by me.. traditional Asian tofu is radically different chemically w kombu seaweed vs calcium chloride made mass market products.. I wouldn't feed soy to my doggie much less eat the stuff.. over 95% of American soy is GMO and even as an organic product there's no research of mine that would make me want to swallow the stuff.. too much Nazi history moving it from animal bedding to filler.
I called a pharmacist at some pharmacy and they told me if you want to know the inactive ingredients in a prescription medicine then you need to ask the manufacturers name for the medicine at the pharmacy then look up that medicine online on that manufacturers website
Pharmacies can switch manufacturers for the same prescription medicine which may change inactive ingredients
For over the counter medicine I believe it is simpky listed on the package but I could be wrong
The pharmacist is given a list of the “non-medicinal ingredients” within each pharmaceutical. Therefore, in order to determine the excipients and fillers used in a particular medication it is up to patients to speak to their pharmacist.
https://ndhealthfacts.org/wiki/Excipients_and_Fillers