That claim is almost certainly misinformation or a misunderstanding.No oncologist (a cancer specialist) has any evidence-based “drink” that can kill cancer cells in the body or treat multiple serious diseases like cancer, gastritis, diabetes, and liver disease all at once. If something like that were proven, it would be major global medical news and would go through large clinical trials, regulatory approval, and publication in reputable journals—not circulate as a single “miracle drink” claim.
Here’s the key issue:
- Cancer: Some substances can kill cancer cells in a lab (test tubes), but that does not mean they work in humans safely or effectively.
- Diabetes, liver disease, gastritis: These are different conditions with different mechanisms and treatments. One drink curing all of them is not medically realistic.
- Claims like this are often tied to supplements, herbal mixtures, or viral health posts that exaggerate early or incomplete research.
If you saw this from a specific doctor, video, or product, it could be:
- Misquoted medical advice
- Marketing for a supplement
- Social media misinformation
- Or confusion between “supportive diet advice” and “cure”
If you want, tell me what the drink is or where you heard it from, and I can break down what’s actually known about its ingredients and whether any part of the claim has scientific support.
