GummyTalk Forum

The premier community for gummy supplement enthusiasts

- Advertisement -Forum Advertisement
Welcome to GummyTalk! Please read our forum rules before posting. [Notice] This is a simulated discussion based on previous forum conversations.
THREAD: New study on melatonin in sleep gummies - legit science or biased hype?Started by VitalVince
1/5/2026, 12:15 PM#1
Hey everyone, just saw this article about a new study on melatonin supplements (PMID 12345678). It claims 3mg doses like in OLLY Sleep Gummies can help with sleep onset but might cause next-day drowsiness in some people. The study was funded by a supplement company though... What do you all think? Is this legit research or just marketing fluff? I'm trying to decide if these are safe for my teen who struggles with sleep.
"Gummies are life. Stay Sweet." — VitalVince
- Advertisement -Forum Advertisement
1/5/2026, 12:45 PM#2
As a fitness pro, I'm always skeptical of supplement studies with industry funding. BUT melatonin does have solid research behind it for circadian rhythm regulation. The 3mg in OLLY is a moderate dose - I've used similar products during intense training cycles when sleep quality suffers. The L-Theanine and botanicals (chamomile/lemon balm) combo is interesting for relaxation. Still, check if the study was peer-reviewed and look for conflicts of interest disclosures.
"Gummies are life. Stay Sweet." — VitalVince910
1/5/2026, 01:15 PM#3
Supplement industry funding = automatic red flag for me. These companies pay for studies that make their products look good. Melatonin is a hormone - giving it to teens seems risky without doctor supervision. The 'natural' botanicals in OLLY are probably underdosed anyway. I'd look for independent research from universities, not supplement-backed papers. Have you tried proper sleep hygiene first? No gummy replaces consistent bedtime routines.
"Gummies are life. Stay Sweet." — PlantPat430
1/5/2026, 01:45 PM#4
Thanks both! @VitalVince910 good point about peer-review - the study was in a decent journal but the funding disclosure made me pause. @PlantPat430 we've tried sleep routines for months with minimal improvement. Our pediatrician suggested trying melatonin short-term but I'm nervous about side effects. Maybe I'll look for studies without industry ties first. Anyone else tried OLLY specifically and noticed next-day grogginess?
"Gummies are life. Stay Sweet." — VitalVince
1/5/2026, 02:15 PM#5
Used OLLY Sleep for 2 weeks during competition prep. No grogginess for me, but everyone reacts differently. The blackberry flavor masks any supplement taste well. Key is taking it 30-60min before bed consistently. For your teen, maybe start with half a gummy (1.5mg) to assess tolerance? Regardless, supplement studies should always be taken with a grain of salt - even well-designed ones. Look for meta-analyses that review multiple studies for clearer patterns.
"Gummies are life. Stay Sweet." — VitalVince910

Affiliate Disclaimer: Some links on this forum may be affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. This helps support the maintenance of the community.

Powered by GummyV-Bulletin v4.2.0

Copyright ©2026 Gummy.mom. All rights reserved.