That kind of claim is a classic health scam pattern.
Phrases like “secret of a Russian doctor,” “drink this water for 7 days,” and “all diseases disappear” are not based on real medicine. They are usually designed to get attention or sell something.
Why it’s not believable
- No single drink or water can cure all diseases. Diseases have different causes (infection, genetics, lifestyle, immune issues, etc.).
- Doctors don’t promote universal “miracle” cures. Real medical treatments are specific to specific conditions.
- “Disappear in 7 days” is a red flag. Legit medical claims don’t promise fast, total cures without evidence.
What it often really is
These types of posts usually lead to:
- selling supplements or “detox” products
- misinformation about “alkaline water,” herbs, or mixtures
- sometimes even scams collecting money or personal data
What actually works
If someone has health issues, real improvement comes from:
- proper diagnosis by a qualified doctor
- evidence-based treatment (medications, lifestyle changes, etc.)
- managing specific conditions individually
If you want, you can share the exact recipe or video you saw—I can break down whether any part of it has real science behind it or not.