Claim statement
Urine alkalinization can matter for some stone types, but commercial alkaline waters often provide too little alkali to replace clinician-directed stone prevention strategies.
This claim needs careful boundaries around population, endpoint, mechanism, or source quality.
VV Claim Boundary Matrix v1.0
VV Claim Integrity Score
This score evaluates how cleanly the claim is bounded by evidence, source quality, applicability, risk handling, and graph support.
75/100
Supported With Boundaries
- Evidence confidence
- 76/100
- Weight 22%
- Canonical editorial confidence in the reviewed evidence.
- Source quality
- 82/100
- Weight 16%
- Strength of source anchors for the claim lane.
- Applicability
- 68/100
- Weight 14%
- How well the evidence maps to the public claim.
- Boundary clarity
- 95/100
- Weight 16%
- Whether strong, weak, and falsifying versions are explicit.
- Overclaim containment
- 92/100
- Weight 12%
- Whether hype risk is controlled by the claim framing.
- Harm-risk handling
- 68/100
- Weight 10%
- Whether safety, regulatory, or caution context is visible.
- Graph support
- 22/100
- Weight 10%
- Depth of source, study, content, and related-claim links.
Supported With Boundaries. The score is driven by graph support as the weakest dimension and remains bounded by evidence type, claim wording, source/study support, and visible limitations.
How the claim framework works ->Strongest version
Urine alkalinization can matter for some stone types, but commercial alkaline waters often provide too little alkali to replace clinician-directed stone prevention strategies.
Weakest version
The evidence does not support turning this into a universal claim for every person or context.
What would change our mind
Larger, better-controlled, independently replicated evidence in the relevant population and outcome lane.
What supports this claim
Early human evidence
Canonical sources and linked study records currently support this claim framing.
What weakens or limits this claim
Limitation
Stone type, urine chemistry, kidney function, and medication context matter.
Limitation
Stone type, urine chemistry, kidney function, and medication context matter.
Sources
- Alkaline water: helpful for uric acid and cystine urolithiasis? - Journal of Urology
