That message is not medically reliable and follows a very common scam/clickbait pattern.
🚨 Red flags in that claim
Phrases like:
- “kills cancer cells”
- “treats diabetes, gastritis, liver disease”
- “oncologist announced”
- “I’ll give you recipes in exchange for OK”
are typical of misinformation posts, not real medical science.
đź§ What medicine actually says
A real Oncology approach is:
- Cancer is treated with surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy
- No drink or home recipe has been proven to cure or kill cancer in humans
A real Cancer is a complex group of diseases, and treatment is always medical and evidence-based.
🍵 About “miracle drinks”
While some drinks (like green tea, herbal teas, etc.) may:
- support general health
- contain antioxidants
- help digestion or hydration
They do NOT cure cancer, diabetes, or liver disease.
At best:
👉 they are supportive habits, not treatments.
⚠️ Why these posts are dangerous
They often:
- give false hope
- delay real medical treatment
- mix real terms (“oncologist”) with fake claims
- use emotional pressure (“say OK to receive recipe”)
đź§ Simple truth
- ❌ No drink cures cancer or chronic diseases
- ❌ No doctor “releases secret recipes” online like this
- ✔️ Real treatments come from clinical research and hospitals
🟢 Bottom line
This is misinformation designed to go viral, not medical advice.
If you want, I can:
âś” explain which drinks actually support health safely
âś” or show you what real evidence-based cancer prevention diet looks like
Just tell me.