Review · Men's & Prostate
Doctor's ED Solution
A $48 digital ED guide wrapped in a 'Pennsylvania doctor' story. The refund window is real, but the content is almost certainly rehashed free advice — and the affiliate hype tells you more than the product page does.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.8/10
A $48 digital ED guide wrapped in a 'Pennsylvania doctor' story. The refund window is real, but the content is almost certainly rehashed free advice — and the affiliate hype tells you more than the product page does.
- Price checked
- $48
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- 'Pennsylvania doctor' is a classic authority appeal with no verifiable name, clinic, or credentials provided on the sales page
- Better use case
- Men who want a single, structured ED action plan and will actually follow it for 60 days — then decide if it's worth keeping
- Skip if
- You've already read the free ED guides from Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, or a urologist — this will overlap 90%
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Doctor’s ED Solution is, in one sentence.
A digital ED protocol sold through ClickBank for $48, fronted by a “Pennsylvania doctor” whose name and credentials aren’t given on the sales page, with a 60-day money-back window that ClickBank — not the vendor — honors.
The marketing calls it a “brand new angle” and a “special method.” What that almost certainly means: a PDF guide, a short video walkthrough, and two bonus PDFs, all built around diet, exercise, and maybe a few supplements. That’s not a criticism — lifestyle changes are the first-line recommendation for erectile dysfunction. The criticism is the price tag and the doctor costume.
What you actually get
Without buying the product (and we haven’t, because the sales page tells us enough), the likely deliverables are:
- Main guide PDF. 50–80 pages of ED protocol. Will cover foods to eat and avoid, exercises (walking, kegels, maybe pelvic floor work), stress reduction, sleep, and a supplement stack. The “special method” is the sequence and the framing, not a molecule.
- Video walkthrough. Probably 10–20 minutes of a slideshow or screen-share, maybe with a voiceover. Designed to make you feel like you’re being coached. Good for compliance; not medically distinct from the PDF.
- Quick-start checklist. A one-page printable summary. Useful if you stick it on the fridge. Useless if you don’t.
- Two bonus PDFs. Likely one on testosterone and one on libido. These are standard ClickBank filler — reworded versions of the same lifestyle advice with a different headline.
- Email support. Probably an autoresponder sequence and a support desk that answers refund requests. Don’t expect a doctor on the other end.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page is written for affiliates, not buyers. Lines like “converts like wildfire” and “cash in on the mind-blowing commissions” belong in an affiliate recruitment room, not a product description. When a vendor leads with how well something sells rather than what it does, the product is often secondary to the funnel.
The “Pennsylvania Doctor” framing is doing heavy lifting. No name, no clinic, no license number. Just a white coat and a state. That’s a classic authority appeal: if a doctor says it, it must be medically sound. But a real doctor would put their name on the work, and a real ED breakthrough would be in a journal, not a ClickBank listing with gravity 0.44.
The gravity number itself is a signal. 0.44 means very few affiliates are promoting this. That’s not proof the product is bad, but it’s a red flag. High-gravity ClickBank products get that way because affiliates see low refund rates and happy customers. Low gravity often means the opposite — or that the product is so new nobody’s tested it yet. Either way, you’re the test case.
What the $48 buys you versus what’s free
Here’s what you can get without spending a dollar:
- Mayo Clinic’s ED guide: covers causes, lifestyle remedies, and when to see a doctor. Free. Evidence-based.
- Cleveland Clinic’s ED article: same information, different layout. Free.
- A urology textbook chapter on lifestyle management of ED: available through any medical library or Google Scholar. Free.
- PubMed abstracts on L-arginine, zinc, and exercise for ED: free, with the actual study data the guide is summarizing.
Doctor’s ED Solution is charging $48 to repackage that information in a single PDF with a doctor story. For some men, that curation is worth the money — it saves time and presents the advice in a step-by-step format. For most, it’s a $48 convenience fee you can refund after you’ve read it.
How the refund works (and how to use it)
The 60-day ClickBank guarantee is real. You email ClickBank support with your order ID, and they refund you. The vendor can’t block it. You keep the files. There’s no return shipping or restocking fee. It’s the cleanest refund process in digital products.
The smart way to buy a product like this: treat the $48 as a fully refundable deposit. Download everything. Read the guide. Follow the protocol for two weeks. If you notice a real, attributable improvement — and you’d recommend the guide to a friend — keep it. If you don’t, or if you realize you already knew everything in it, refund on day 59. The vendor built the refund window into the price; using it is fair.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’re a man who hasn’t read a single ED guide and wants a structured, doctor-framed plan you can follow without assembling information from five different websites. Read it inside the 60-day window. Keep it only if you’d honestly recommend it.
Skip this if you’ve already been through the Mayo Clinic or Cleveland Clinic ED pages. The overlap will be near-total, and the “special method” won’t be special. Also skip if you need actual medical oversight — this is a PDF, not a telehealth appointment. If your ED is new, worsening, or accompanied by other symptoms, see a real doctor, not a ClickBank listing.
The honest read
Doctor’s ED Solution is a digital curation of free, evidence-based lifestyle advice for erectile dysfunction, sold at a $48 markup and wrapped in a doctor costume. The refund window is real, the information is probably accurate, and the structure might help some men stick to the protocol. But the sales page is written to recruit affiliates, not to inform buyers, and the “Pennsylvania doctor” authority claim collapses under a two-minute Google search that turns up no name, no clinic, no license.
If you need a single PDF that tells you to walk more, eat better, sleep more, and take zinc, and you’re willing to pay $48 for the convenience, buy it, read it, and decide inside 60 days. If you’re looking for a medical breakthrough, keep looking — this isn’t it.
— Rhett Calder
Here's what I'd actually do
If the sales VSL got you to reach for your card before the ingredient panel got you to ask any questions:
Close this tab. Doctor's ED Solution - Brand New Angle is in the band where the marketing is doing the heavy lifting and the formula is not. There are evidence-based versions of every promise on that sales page, and most of them cost a third of the price with full label transparency.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you are using it to skip the conversation with your primary-care doctor. The thing the marketing is hinting at is the thing a 15-minute appointment with bloodwork would resolve.
— Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is Doctor's ED Solution a scam?
- No. You'll get a digital product, and the 60-day ClickBank refund window is real. The problem isn't that it's a scam — it's that the $48 price tag is for curation and a doctor story, not a medically novel solution.
- What exactly is the 'special method'?
- The sales page doesn't say, which is the first red flag. Based on every other ED guide in this category, expect a protocol combining diet (more greens, less processed food), exercise (walking, kegels), sleep hygiene, and maybe two or three supplements like L-arginine or zinc. Nothing you couldn't find on a reputable health site.
- How does the refund work?
- Contact ClickBank customer support with your order ID within 60 days. They process the refund, not the vendor, so the vendor can't stall you. You keep the digital files — there's no DRM or return process. Refunds typically hit in 3–7 business days.
- Is there any recurring billing?
- The cart shows a single $48 charge with no subscription. But always read the final checkout page carefully — some vendors add upsells after the initial purchase. Those upsells are also covered by the 60-day refund window if you buy them.