CHAMGAP
APPROVEDReviewed and approved by the Chamgap Editorial Team (2026-07-09). The draft was written by AI, all 3 cited sources were opened and checked for existence, and the verdict passed blind grading and adversarial audit. Methodology v0.6.
Verdict No. 155 · Search date 2026-07-09 · Methodology v0.6

Rosehip,
does it really help with Joints (osteoarthritis) and antioxidant?

30-Second Summary
C
Evidence Grade C · 54 · Safety acceptable
This is limited evidence for possible osteoarthritis pain relief
What the
research shows
Rosehip has a small positive signal for the possibility of relieving osteoarthritis pain. The Christensen 2008 meta-analysis (3 RCTs, about 287 participants) reported pain reduction, but the studies were small, the effect was small, and large independent replication is lacking. Therefore, the grade is C for about "possible osteoarthritis pain relief."
What the
ads claim
Advertisements combine 'joint cartilage,' 'anti-inflammatory,' 'antioxidant,' 'vitamin C bomb,' and 'pain relief.' What the studies examined more directly was osteoarthritis symptom scores.
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Useful facts when choosing a product

  • Clinical trials generally used specific rosehip powder around 5 g/day.
  • Products differ depending on whether seeds and shells are included, drying and milling methods, and whether GOPO is standardized.
  • Antioxidant content does not guarantee clinical joint improvement.
  • Caution is needed for gastrointestinal discomfort, allergy, and possible concomitant use with anticoagulants.
Gap Measurement · Verdict 155 · C 54
What advertising claims
What independent, higher-quality research supports
△ GAP
01

What the research actually shows

The Christensen 2008 meta-analysis pooled 3 RCTs of Rosa canina hip powder, about 287 participants, and reported a small effect on pain reduction. Studies from the Warholm 2003 and Winther 2005 lines showed signals that rosehip powder reduced pain or rescue-medication use in patients with knee and hip osteoarthritis, but the samples were not large and product specificity is substantial. NCCIH also summarizes that the evidence for other supplements in osteoarthritis is generally limited.

02

Why this is classified as C (54)

There are RCT and meta-analysis signals using direct symptom endpoints of osteoarthritis pain, so the rating is not D. However, because of small scale, small effect, product specificity, and lack of large independent replication, the grade is not B but C with 54 points.

Counterpoint. The possibility of reduced pain and rescue-medication use remains for some patients with osteoarthritis. This judgment does not give the same grade to cartilage regeneration or anti-aging antioxidant claims.

Rejudgment record. Final reassessment — Small pain signal from a meta-analysis of 3 RCTs and about 287 participants, but small scale and lack of large independent replication

Cross-check — Codex and Claude

This verdict was drafted by Codex through literature review and source-existence checks, cross-checked through blind grading and adversarial audit, and settled by reapplying the methodology boundary rules. Cases with split grades were resolved through rejudgment.
03

Evidence Table

StudyDesignSampleFundingEndpointResultWeight
Christensen R et al. 2008Meta-analysis of RCTs287Unknown/possibly product-relatedOsteoarthritis painReported a small pain-reduction effect of rosehip powder.Key
Warholm O et al. 2003Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial100Possibly product-relatedPain and functionSignal of symptom improvement in the rosehip powder group.Supportive
Winther K et al. 2005Randomized placebo-controlled trialPossibly product-relatedPain and rescue-medication useSignal of reduced pain and rescue-medication use.Supportive
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Receipt — 3 References

Every cited source was opened and checked against the live page on 2026-07-09.

Christensen R, Bartels EM, Altman RD, Astrup A, Bliddal H. Does the hip powder of Rosa canina reduce pain in osteoarthritis patients? A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2008;16(9):965-972.
checked
Warholm O, Skaar S, Hedman E, Mølmen HM, Eik L. The effects of a standardized herbal remedy made from a subtype of Rosa canina in patients with osteoarthritis. Curr Ther Res. 2003;64(1):21-31.
checked
Winther K, Apel K, Thamsborg G. A powder made from seeds and shells of a rose-hip subspecies reduces symptoms of knee and hip osteoarthritis. Scand J Rheumatol. 2005;34(4):302-308.
checked
Draft and rewrite: Codex (AI) · Verification: Codex blind grading and adversarial audit · Final adjudication: Claude
Reviewed and approved: Chamgap Editorial Team · Approval date: 2026-07-09 · Corrections: none

Cite this verdict

Rosehip (Rosa canina) x osteoarthritis and antioxidant Evidence Grade C card
[Chamgap] Rosehip (Rosa canina) x osteoarthritis and antioxidant — Evidence Grade C·54. 3 cited sources checked. Source: https://health-receipt.pages.dev/en/verdicts/joint-bone/rosehip-osteoarthritis-antioxidant/ · CC BY 4.0

CC BY 4.0 — free to use with attribution; do not distort grades, numbers, or verdict meaning.

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What this document does and does not do

Chamgap is an information source. It reports what research has and has not confirmed; it does not tell readers what to take or buy. That decision belongs to readers and, when needed, medical or legal professionals. This verdict reflects literature available up to the search date and may change as new research appears. Nothing here is medical advice.